The total lifetime health cost savings of smoking cessation to society

Background: Smoking cessation has major immediate and long-term health benefits. However, ex-smokers' total lifetime health costs and continuing smokers' costs remain uncompared, and hence the economic savings of smoking cessation to society have not been determined. Methods: The economic...

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Published inEuropean journal of public health Vol. 15; no. 6; pp. 601 - 606
Main Authors Rasmussen, Susanne R., Prescott, Eva, Sørensen, Thorkild I. A., Søgaard, Jes
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published England Oxford University Press 01.12.2005
Oxford Publishing Limited (England)
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Summary:Background: Smoking cessation has major immediate and long-term health benefits. However, ex-smokers' total lifetime health costs and continuing smokers' costs remain uncompared, and hence the economic savings of smoking cessation to society have not been determined. Methods: The economic effects of smoking cessation in a lifetime perspective have been examined by comparing the health costs of continuing smokers and ex-smokers by quantity of daily tobacco consumption, age, gender and disease group, while taking differences in life expectancy and the reductions in relative risks after cessation into account. Results: The total lifetime health cost savings of smoking cessation are highest at the younger ages. Although the economic savings vary with age at quitting, gender and quantity of daily tobacco consumption, all ex-smoking men and women who quit smoking at the age of 35 to 55 years generate sizeable total lifetime cost savings. At older ages, the total lifetime health cost savings of smoking cessation are of little economic consequence to the society. The total, direct and productivity lifetime cost savings of smoking cessation in moderate smokers who quit smoking at the age of 35 years are 24 800 €, 7600 €, and 17 200 € in men, and 34 100 €, 12 200 €, and 21 800 € in women, respectively. Conclusions: Lifetime health cost savings of smoking cessation to society are substantial at younger ages, in terms of both direct and productivity costs.
Bibliography:ark:/67375/HXZ-JQZT1J32-7
Correspondence: Susanne Reindahl Rasmussen, DSI Danish Institute for Health Services Research, Dampfaergevej 27–29, PO Box 2595, DK—2100 Copenhagen Ø, Denmark, tel: +45-35298433, fax: +45-35298499, e-mail: srr@dsi.dk
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istex:616C3164C7870BF6413F2DC6281F8729D976FE9B
ObjectType-Article-1
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
ObjectType-Feature-2
content type line 23
ISSN:1101-1262
1464-360X
DOI:10.1093/eurpub/cki024