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The
Tobacco Dependence Program (TDP) is dedicated to reducing the
harm to health caused by tobacco use. The TDP particularly aims
to provide expertise on quitting smoking for those who need
it most.
We do this through education, treatment, research and advocacy.
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Treating
Tobacco Use and Dependence
Fact
Sheet
- Recent
surveys show that 25 percent of all American adults
smoke.
- More
than 430,000 deaths in the United States each year are
attributable to tobacco use, making tobacco the No.
1 cause of death and disease in this country.
- Smoking
prevalence among adolescents has risen dramatically
since 1990, with more than 3,000 additional children
and adolescents becoming regular users of tobacco each
day.
- Nationwide,
medical care costs attributable to smoking (or smoking-related
disease) have been estimated by the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention to be more than $50 billion annually.
In addition, they estimate the value of lost earnings
and loss of productivity to be at least another $47
billion a year.
- It
would cost an estimated $6.3 billion annually to provide
75 percent of smokers 18 years and older with the intervention—counseling,
nicotine patches, nicotine gum, or a combination—of
their choice. This would result in 1.7 million new quitters
at an average cost of $3,779 per quitter—a move that
would be cost-effective in relation to other medical
interventions such as mammography or blood pressure
screening.
- Epidemiologic
data suggest that more than 70 percent of the 50 million
smokers in the United States today have made at least
one prior quit attempt, and approximately 46 percent
try to quit each year. Most smokers make several quit
attempts before they successfully kick the habit.
- Only
21 percent of practicing physicians say that they have
received adequate training to help their patients stop
smoking, according to a recent survey of U.S. medical
school deans published in the Journal of the American
Medical Association. The majority of medical schools
do not require clinical training in smoking cessation
techniques. It is hoped that this guideline will serve
as a call to action.
Current
as of June 2000
Internet
Citation:
Treating
Tobacco Use and Dependence. Fact Sheet, June 2000.
U.S. Public Health Service. http://www.surgeongeneral.gov/tobacco/smokfact.htm
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317
George Street, Suite 210 | New Brunswick, New Jersey 08901-2008
| Phone (732)
235-8212 | Fax (732) 235-8297
| info@tobaccoprogram.org
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