Smoking-attributable medical care costs in the USA

被引:93
|
作者
Miller, VP [1 ]
Ernst, C [1 ]
Collin, F [1 ]
机构
[1] Berkeley Econ Res Associates, Berkeley, CA 94705 USA
关键词
smoking; tobacco; medical care costs; NMES; smoking-attributable fraction;
D O I
10.1016/S0277-9536(98)00344-X
中图分类号
R1 [预防医学、卫生学];
学科分类号
1004 ; 120402 ;
摘要
Medical care costs attributable to cigarette smoking are estimated using an econometric model of annual individual expenditures for four types of medical services: ambulatory, hospital, prescription drug, and other (which includes home health and durable medical equipment and excludes dental and mental health). The model follows the two-part specification of Duan et al. (1983). Estimation is carried out using the 1987 National Medical Expenditure Survey. Fitted values are used to calculate smoking-attributable fractions (SAFs) of expense by type of service and by age and gender category. The overall weighted average SAF is 6.54%. SAFs are generally largest for ambulatory and smallest for hospital expenses. They are larger for males and for the older age categories. The model is analyzed for heteroscedasticity and goodness of fit. Additional analysis using the National Health Interview Survey is conducted to test for the possible effect of not being able to include alcohol consumption in the primary model. A balanced repeated replication analysis is conducted to evaluate the variance of the SAFs. Variances are found to be acceptably small. An extension of the model to support evaluation of smoking-attributable costs for special populations such as individual states, and special insurance pools such as Medicaid recipients, is described. Results for the fifty states are presented. Conclusions and subjects for further research are discussed. (C) 1998 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:375 / 391
页数:17
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Costs of Smoking-Attributable Productivity Losses in Poland
    Lasocka, Joanna
    Jakubczyk, Michal
    Siekmeier, Ruediger
    [J]. RESPIRATORY REGULATION - CLINICAL ADVANCES, 2013, 755 : 179 - 187
  • [2] RAPID ESTIMATION OF SMOKING-ATTRIBUTABLE MORTALITY AND ECONOMIC COSTS
    Lorden, A.
    Beebe, L. A.
    Ohsfeldt, R. L.
    [J]. VALUE IN HEALTH, 2018, 21 : S236 - S236
  • [3] SMOKING-ATTRIBUTABLE CANCER MORTALITY
    SONDIK, EJ
    [J]. JOURNAL OF THE NATIONAL CANCER INSTITUTE, 1991, 83 (24) : 1834 - 1834
  • [4] Smoking-attributable Mortality in the United States
    Rostron, Brian
    [J]. EPIDEMIOLOGY, 2011, 22 (03) : 350 - 355
  • [5] MEDICAL-CARE COSTS ATTRIBUTABLE TO CIGARETTE-SMOKING IN KENTUCKY
    HINDS, MW
    [J]. SOUTHERN MEDICAL JOURNAL, 1986, 79 (06) : 665 - 668
  • [6] Smoking-Attributable Mortality in Spain in 2016
    Monica, Perez-Rios
    Schiaffino, Anna
    Montes, Agustin
    Fernandez, Esteve
    Lopez, Maria Jose
    Martinez-Sanchez, Jose Maria
    Sureda, Xisca
    Martinez, Cristina
    Fu, Marcela
    Continente, Xavier Garcia
    Ares, Jose Luis Carretero
    Galan, Inaki
    [J]. ARCHIVOS DE BRONCONEUMOLOGIA, 2020, 56 (09): : 559 - 563
  • [7] Smoking-attributable medical expenditures: Time biases and smokers' social role
    Braillon, Alain
    [J]. PREVENTIVE MEDICINE, 2015, 81 : 294 - 294
  • [8] Smoking-attributable deaths in Spain in 1998
    Banegas, JRB
    Gañán, LD
    Rodríguez-Artalejo, F
    Enríquez, JG
    Pérez-Regadera, AG
    Alvarez, FV
    [J]. MEDICINA CLINICA, 2001, 117 (18): : 692 - 694
  • [9] Smoking-attributable deaths in Spain, 2006
    Banegas, Jose R.
    Diez-Ganan, Lucia
    Banuelos-Marco, Beatriz
    Gonzalez-Enriquez, Jesus
    Villar-Alvarez, Fernando
    Martin-Moreno, Jose M.
    Cordoba-Garcia, Rodrigo
    Perez-Trullen, Alfonso
    Jimenez-Ruiz, Carlos
    [J]. MEDICINA CLINICA, 2011, 136 (03): : 97 - 102
  • [10] Smoking-attributable mortality in the Czech Republic
    Sovinová H.
    Csémy L.
    Procházka B.
    Kottnauerová S.
    [J]. Journal of Public Health, 2008, 16 (1) : 37 - 42