Close X
Wednesday, October 9, 2024
ADVT 
National

One More Hurdle Removed For B.C. Smokers Hoping To Quit In 2016

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 30 Dec, 2015 02:05 PM
    VANCOUVER — The B.C. government is making it easier for smokers who want to kick the habit in 2016.
     
    Health Minister Terry Lake says starting Jan. 1, anyone who wants to quit no longer needs to call HealthLink BC at 8-1-1 to join the province's smoking cessation program.
     
    Lake says smokers can sign up at any pharmacy and have access to free nicotine replacement therapy products.
     
    Options include nicotine lozenges, inhalers, gum, the nicotine skin patch, as well as specific prescription drugs.
     
    B.C. Pharmacy Association CEO Geraldine Vance says pharmacists are committed to helping patients lead healthier lives and want to assist smokers with making 2016 the year they quit successfully. 
     
    The smoking cessation program began in 2011 and the province says it has invested more than $38-million since then, helping more than 187,000 people try to kick the habit.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Speedy Report Stops Suspicious Fire From Jumping To Parched Victoria-Area Woods

    Speedy Report Stops Suspicious Fire From Jumping To Parched Victoria-Area Woods
    DISTRICT OF HIGHLANDS, B.C. — A firebug may be on the loose in the suburban Victoria District of Highlands, on Vancouver Island.

    Speedy Report Stops Suspicious Fire From Jumping To Parched Victoria-Area Woods

    Newspaper Apologizes For Involving Liberal Joyce Murray In Controversy Over Ad

    Newspaper Apologizes For Involving Liberal Joyce Murray In Controversy Over Ad
    Liberal MP Joyce Murray is apologizing for a newspaper advertisement in which she appears to be feeding racial stereotypes about aboriginal people.

    Newspaper Apologizes For Involving Liberal Joyce Murray In Controversy Over Ad

    B.C. Health Firings Prompt Legal Changes To Pave Way For Investigation

    VICTORIA — British Columbia's ongoing health firings scandal is about to share the stage with the Liberal government's vaunted liquefied natural gas project law.

    B.C. Health Firings Prompt Legal Changes To Pave Way For Investigation

    Indian-American Hotelier And Former Banker Admits To Defrauding Investor Of $500,000

    Indian-American Hotelier And Former Banker Admits To Defrauding Investor Of $500,000
    A hotelier and former banker of Indian origin has admitted in a federal court to defrauding an investor of $500,000 and now faces a prison sentence, according to a federal prosecutor in Tennessee.

    Indian-American Hotelier And Former Banker Admits To Defrauding Investor Of $500,000

    Big Banks Pass On Part Of Bank Of Canada Rate Cut, Prime Rate Reduced To 2.70%

    Big Banks Pass On Part Of Bank Of Canada Rate Cut, Prime Rate Reduced To 2.70%
    OTTAWA — Less than 24 hours after the Bank of Canada cuts its key interest rate, Canada's big banks have partially followed suit.

    Big Banks Pass On Part Of Bank Of Canada Rate Cut, Prime Rate Reduced To 2.70%

    Restaurants Consider Raising Menu Prices To Keep Up With Soaring Cost Of Food

    Restaurants Consider Raising Menu Prices To Keep Up With Soaring Cost Of Food
    Quarterly figures from Restaurants Canada suggests that 65 per cent of the country's eateries report their food budgets are higher than they were at the same time last year.

    Restaurants Consider Raising Menu Prices To Keep Up With Soaring Cost Of Food