Individual cost of smoking in a study population

Background The rising price of cigarettes has prompted many smokers to quit. Those who continue to smoke are now concentrated in lower income populations and an increasing amount of their income is dedicated to tobacco. This analysis looks at the percentage of annual income spent on tobacco by smok...

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Main Authors: Joni Jensen, Bruce Lindgren, Dorothy Hatsukami
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: European Publishing 2018-03-01
Series:Tobacco Induced Diseases
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.journalssystem.com/tid/Individual-cost-of-smoking-in-a-study-population,84752,0,2.html
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spelling doaj-1af3a80e32dd4d439c8f44e95ccc32f52020-11-25T01:29:15ZengEuropean PublishingTobacco Induced Diseases1617-96252018-03-0116110.18332/tid/8475284752Individual cost of smoking in a study populationJoni Jensen0Bruce Lindgren1Dorothy Hatsukami2University of Minnesota, Masonic Cancer Center, United States of AmericaUniversity of Minnesota, Biostatistics Masonic Cancer Center, United States of AmericaUniversity of Minnesota, Department of Psychiatry, United States of AmericaBackground The rising price of cigarettes has prompted many smokers to quit. Those who continue to smoke are now concentrated in lower income populations and an increasing amount of their income is dedicated to tobacco. This analysis looks at the percentage of annual income spent on tobacco by smokers in a multi-site research study. Methods Subjects (n=605) screened for a study involving switching smokers to alternative nicotine products were asked demographics, annual income, purchase price per pack of cigarettes, and cigarettes smoked per day to estimate annual tobacco costs. Wilcoxon rank sum test compared the percent of income spent on cigarettes across several demographic variables. Results Subjects were an average of 43.4 years old (SD=13.1), smoking 15.6 (7.4) cigarettes per day for 10 years; 56.3% were white, 35.2% black and 8.6% other; and mostly male (58%). Nearly a third of the subjects were unemployed (31.6%) and an additional 5.5% were disabled; 46.6% reported either full/part time or casual work. The average amount spent on tobacco was US$1,743 across all 3 sites or 10% of annual income. Percent of income spent across sites was 11.4 in Minnesota, 9.4 in Ohio, and 8.2 in New York. As expected, unemployed and disabled spent a significantly higher percent of their income compared to employed subjects (13.1 vs 8.0; p< 0.001). Gender or age were not related to cigarette spending. Over a quarter of the subjects reported an annual income of less than $10,000 (28.6%). Those reporting annual incomes of < $10,000, well below the poverty line compared to those above this line, spent a significantly higher percent on cigarettes (17.2 and 7.2 respectively; p< 0.001). Conclusions Nicotine addiction is an economic burden for those smokers already living in poverty. Cessation treatment must be provided to this population especially when increased taxes are used for tobacco control.http://www.journalssystem.com/tid/Individual-cost-of-smoking-in-a-study-population,84752,0,2.htmlWCTOH
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Joni Jensen
Bruce Lindgren
Dorothy Hatsukami
spellingShingle Joni Jensen
Bruce Lindgren
Dorothy Hatsukami
Individual cost of smoking in a study population
Tobacco Induced Diseases
WCTOH
author_facet Joni Jensen
Bruce Lindgren
Dorothy Hatsukami
author_sort Joni Jensen
title Individual cost of smoking in a study population
title_short Individual cost of smoking in a study population
title_full Individual cost of smoking in a study population
title_fullStr Individual cost of smoking in a study population
title_full_unstemmed Individual cost of smoking in a study population
title_sort individual cost of smoking in a study population
publisher European Publishing
series Tobacco Induced Diseases
issn 1617-9625
publishDate 2018-03-01
description Background The rising price of cigarettes has prompted many smokers to quit. Those who continue to smoke are now concentrated in lower income populations and an increasing amount of their income is dedicated to tobacco. This analysis looks at the percentage of annual income spent on tobacco by smokers in a multi-site research study. Methods Subjects (n=605) screened for a study involving switching smokers to alternative nicotine products were asked demographics, annual income, purchase price per pack of cigarettes, and cigarettes smoked per day to estimate annual tobacco costs. Wilcoxon rank sum test compared the percent of income spent on cigarettes across several demographic variables. Results Subjects were an average of 43.4 years old (SD=13.1), smoking 15.6 (7.4) cigarettes per day for 10 years; 56.3% were white, 35.2% black and 8.6% other; and mostly male (58%). Nearly a third of the subjects were unemployed (31.6%) and an additional 5.5% were disabled; 46.6% reported either full/part time or casual work. The average amount spent on tobacco was US$1,743 across all 3 sites or 10% of annual income. Percent of income spent across sites was 11.4 in Minnesota, 9.4 in Ohio, and 8.2 in New York. As expected, unemployed and disabled spent a significantly higher percent of their income compared to employed subjects (13.1 vs 8.0; p< 0.001). Gender or age were not related to cigarette spending. Over a quarter of the subjects reported an annual income of less than $10,000 (28.6%). Those reporting annual incomes of < $10,000, well below the poverty line compared to those above this line, spent a significantly higher percent on cigarettes (17.2 and 7.2 respectively; p< 0.001). Conclusions Nicotine addiction is an economic burden for those smokers already living in poverty. Cessation treatment must be provided to this population especially when increased taxes are used for tobacco control.
topic WCTOH
url http://www.journalssystem.com/tid/Individual-cost-of-smoking-in-a-study-population,84752,0,2.html
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