This quarterly report presents provisional results from the monitoring of the NHS Stop Smoking Services (formerly known as the smoking cessation services).
Of those clients who set a quit date during the period April to September 2003, 68,600 had successfully quit at the 4 week follow up; this compares with 55,700 in the same period in 2002 (an increase of 23%).
The key results show that, in England, during the period April to September 2003:
Some tables giving more details of these results are attached.
Produced by the Government Statistical Service
1. Press enquiries should be directed to: the Department of Health Media Centre, tel: 020 7210 5707/5287.
2. The White Paper, 'Smoking Kills', was published in December 1998 outlining the Government's policies on smoking. This contained three key targets: young people's smoking; adult smoking; and pregnant women. The establishment of Stop Smoking Services (formerly known as Smoking Cessation Services) in the NHS is an important element of the Government's strategy for tackling smoking in recognition that many smokers want to stop, but find it hard to do so. This policy has been more recently restated in the NHS Plan and the NHS Cancer Plan.
3. NHS Stop Smoking Services were launched in the Health Action Zones in 1999/00, with services rolled out across the NHS in 2000/01. In the 4 years up to and including 2002/03, £70m was made available for these services, plus £6m to develop services to help pregnant smokers. Some £138m has been made available to the Services over the three years 2003/04 to 2005/06 (£41m/£46m/£51m). Details can be found in Health Service Circular 2002/12 available on the Department of Health web site, (see below "Letters and circulars"
)
4. In 2002/03, a target was set for the services to deliver 100,000 successful quitters at the 4 week follow up (based on self-report). A target for the three years 2003/4 to 2005/06 of 800,000 successful quitters at the 4 week follow up (based on self report) has been announced in the document Priorities and Planning Framework 2003-2006 available below: "Improvement, expansion and reform: The next three years' priorities and planning framework, 2003-2006"
.
5. Information on the number of people setting a quit date, and the number who successfully quit at the 4 week follow-up (self report), for each Strategic Health Authority, is included at table 5b and for each Primary Care Trust at table 7.
6. Final figures for 2002/03 were published as a Statistical Bulletin on 12 November 2003; this Statistical Bulletin 'Statistics on smoking cessation services in England, April 2002 to March 2003' is available below "Statistical Bulletin Statistics on smoking cessation services in England, April 2002 to March 2003"
A quarterly report presenting provisional results for April to June 2003 was published on 12 November 2003 and is available below: "Statistics on smoking cessation services in England, April to June 2003"
7. A Statistical Bulletin presenting information from a variety of sources on smoking titled 'Statistics on smoking: England, 2003' was published on 12 November 2003, and it is available below.
8. The telephone number for the NHS smoking helpline is 0800 169 0 169. The telephone number for the NHS pregnancy smoking helpline is 0800 169 9 169.
Contact details for obtaining hard-copy DH publications.

Useful tips to ensure you get the most from PDFs and the free Reader program. Topics covered include accessibility, troubleshooting and searching files.