锘?html> CDC - Media Relations - Press Release - June 30, 2005
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        Press Release

        Embargoed until
        Noon ET
        June 30, 2005
        Contact: CDC National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion
        Office of Communication
        770-488-5131

        Smoking Deaths Cost Nation $92 Billion in Lost Productivity Annually

        Smoking cost the nation about $92 billion in the form of lost productivity in 1997-2001, up about $10 billion from the annual mortality related productivity losses for the years 1995-1999, according to new data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The new lost productivity estimate when combined with smoking-related health-care costs, which was reported at $75.5 billion in 1998, exceeds $167 billion per year in the United States.

        The report also finds that during 1997-2001 an estimated 438,000 premature deaths occur each year as a result of smoking and exposure to secondhand smoke. In comparison, approximately 440,000 smoking-related deaths were estimated to have occurred annually from 1995-1999.

        鈥淐igarette smoking continues to impose substantial health and financial costs on individuals and society,鈥?said CDC Director Dr. Julie Gerberding. "We鈥檝e made good progress in reducing the number of people who smoke, but we have much more work to do. If we want to significantly reduce the toll in this decade, we must provide the 32 million smokers who say they want to quit with the tools and support to do so successfully.鈥?/p>

        This latest study updates the number of deaths due to smoking during 1997-2001, specifically updating the 1995-1999 average estimates previously released. It also reports productivity losses from deaths and finds that smoking causes 3.3 million years of potential life lost for men and 2.2 million years for women. Smoking, on average, reduces adult life expectancy by approximately 14 years.

        鈥淒espite the slow steady declines in prevalence in the United States, cigarette smoking still causes hundreds of thousands of preventable deaths each year," said Dr. Corinne Husten, acting director, CDC Office on Smoking and Health. 鈥淚t鈥檚 in everyone鈥檚 best interest to prevent and reduce tobacco use. People will have longer, healthier lives, and there will be fewer smoking-related costs."

        For more information about tobacco use and smoking cessation, visit the Office on Smoking and Health Web site at http://www.cy118119.com/tobacco. One resource now available to all smokers is HHS鈥?1-800-QUIT-NOW (1-800-784-8669). The toll-free number is a single access point to the National

        Network of Tobacco Cessation Quitlines. Callers are automatically routed to their state鈥檚 quitline services.
         


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        This page last updated June 30, 2005
        URL: http://www.cy118119.com/media/pressrel/r050630.htm

        United States Department of Health and Human Services
        Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
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        Division of Media Relations

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