Smoking doesn’t just ruin your health. It can also burn a nasty hole through your wallet.
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Smoking doesn’t just ruin your health. It can also burn a nasty hole through your wallet. Tobacco use accounts for nearly half a million deaths in the U.S. each year and is the leading cause of lung cancer, according to the American Lung Association. Smokers also may have an increased risk of severe symptoms from COVID-19. In addition, even those around tobacco smokers aren’t safe from its harmful effects. Since 1964, smoking-related illnesses have claimed over 20 million lives in the U.S., 2.5 million of which belonged to nonsmokers who developed diseases merely from secondhand-smoke exposure.
However, the economic and societal costs of smoking are just as huge. Every year, smoking costs the U.S. more than $300 billion, which includes both medical care and lost productivity. Unfortunately, some people will have to pay more depending on the state in which they live.
To encourage the estimated 34.2 million tobacco users in the U.S. to kick this dangerous habit, WalletHub calculated the potential monetary losses — including the lifetime and annual costs of a cigarette pack per day, health care expenditures, income losses and other costs — brought on by smoking and exposure to secondhand smoke.
The Financial Cost of Smoking in Florida (1=Lowest, 25=Avg.):
• Out-of-pocket cost per smoker – $115,106 (Rank: 16th)
• Financial-opportunity cost per smoker – $1,204,198 (Rank: 16th)
• Health-care cost per smoker – $162,200 (Rank: 27th)
• Income loss per smoker – $480,902 (Rank: 14th)
• Other costs per smoker – $16,647 (Rank: 48th)
• total cost over lifetime per smoker: $$1,979,054
What are the most effective strategies for individuals trying to quit smoking? What approaches typically fail?
“Most smokers want to quit, but it often takes multiple attempts before quitting is achieved, often up to 20 or more. But the good news is that there are now more ex-smokers than current smokers. The odds of quitting are increased if the smoker gets counseling combined with smoking cessation medications such as nicotine replacement therapy and varenicline. Calling a toll-free quit line (1-800-QUITNOW) is also helpful. Unassisted quitting (“cold turkey”) is less helpful, and living with someone who smokes is also a handicap," said Steven A. Schroeder, MD – Director, Smoking Cessation Leadership Center; Distinguished Professor, University of California, San Francisco
“In general, about 5 percent of smokers will quit each year according to national surveys. To increase the rate of success, the USPHS Clinical Practice Guideline ‘Treating Tobacco Use and Dependence’ recommends a combination of cessation counseling and medication (nicotine replacement therapy or varenicline or bupropion). Strategies that use one without the other are less likely to result in a successful quit. The Clinical Practice Guideline also recommends that healthcare providers take an active role in helping smokers quit by ‘asking’ all patients if they use tobacco, ‘advising’ tobacco users to quit, and ‘referring’ tobacco users to treatment that includes counseling and medication. This is known as the Ask-Advise-Refer model," said Amy Ferketich, Ph.D. – Professor, Ohio State University
Should e-cigarettes be regulated and taxed as cigarettes or as medical devices?
“E-cigarettes do not meet the definition of a medical device per Section 201(h) of the Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act. E-cigarettes, however, as well as other vaping products meet the definition of a tobacco product and should be regulated and taxed as other tobacco products. There is a critical need for rigorous randomized controlled trials to establish e-cigarettes as effective cessation devices, relative to other FDA-approved therapies such as gum, lozenges, and patches," said Mary Rezk-Hanna, Ph.D., FAHA – Assistant Professor, University of California, Los Angeles