• Lutte contre les cancers

  • Analyses économiques et systèmes de soins

Smoking-attributable medical expenditures by age, sex, and smoking status estimated using a relative risk approach

Menée aux Etats-Unis à partir des données 2012 d'une enquête nationale de santé et de données hospitalières, cette étude estime, en fonction de catégories d'âge, du sexe et du statut tabagique, les coûts médicaux associés au tabagisme

Objective : To accurately assess the benefits of tobacco control interventions and to better inform decision makers, knowledge of medical expenditures by age, gender, and smoking status is essential. Method : We propose an approach to distribute smoking-attributable expenditures by age, gender, and cigarette smoking status to reflect the known risks of smoking. We distribute hospitalization days for smoking-attributable diseases according to relative risks of smoking-attributable mortality, and use the method to determine national estimates of smoking-attributable expenditures by age, sex, and cigarette smoking status. Sensitivity analyses explored assumptions of the method. Results : Both current and former smokers ages 75 and over have about 12 times the smoking-attributable expenditures of their current and former smoker counterparts 35–54 years of age. Within each age group, the expenditures of formers smokers are about 70% lower than current smokers. In sensitivity analysis, these results were not robust to large changes to the relative risks of smoking-attributable mortality which were used in the calculations. Conclusion : Sex- and age-group-specific smoking expenditures reflect observed disease risk differences between current and former cigarette smokers and indicate that about 70% of current smokers' excess medical care costs is preventable by quitting.

Preventive Medicine

Voir le bulletin