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. 1997 Aug 19;96(4):1089-96.
doi: 10.1161/01.cir.96.4.1089.

Short-term economic and health benefits of smoking cessation: myocardial infarction and stroke

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Short-term economic and health benefits of smoking cessation: myocardial infarction and stroke

J M Lightwood et al. Circulation. .

Abstract

Background: Most analyses of the economic benefits of smoking cessation consider long-term effects, which are often not of interest to public and private policy makers. These analyses fail to account for the time course of the short-run cost savings from the rapid decline in risk of acute myocardial infarction (AMI) and stroke.

Methods and results: We estimate the time course of the fall in risk of AMI and stroke after smoking cessation and simulate the impact of a 1% absolute reduction in smoking prevalence on the number of and short-term direct medical costs associated with the prevented AMIs and strokes. In the first year, there would be 924+/-679 (mean+/-SD) fewer hospitalizations for AMI and 538+/-508 for stroke, resulting in an immediate savings of $44+/-26 million. A 7-year program that reduced smoking prevalence by 1% per year would result in a total of 63,840+/-15,521 fewer hospitalizations for AMI and 34,261+/-9133 fewer for stroke, resulting in a total savings of $3.20+/-0.59 billion in costs, and would prevent approximately 13,100 deaths resulting from AMI that occur before people reach the hospital. Creating a new nonsmoker reduces anticipated medical costs associated with AMI and stroke by $47 in the first year and by $853 during the next 7 years (discounting 2.5% per year).

Conclusions: Although primary prevention of smoking among teenagers is important, reducing adult smoking pays more immediate dividends, both in terms of health improvements and cost savings.

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Comment in

  • Curbing the tobacco menace.
    Kannel WB. Kannel WB. Circulation. 1997 Aug 19;96(4):1070. doi: 10.1161/01.cir.96.4.1070. Circulation. 1997. PMID: 9286929 No abstract available.

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