Disparities
among smokers widening as most vulnerable find it hardest to quit
University of Colorado
Anschutz Medical Campus
After decades of
declining US smoking rates overall, most remaining smokers have low income, no
college education, no health insurance or a disability, according to research
from the Colorado School of Public Health at CU Anschutz.
About 15 percent of US
adults -- more than 36 million -- continue to smoke cigarettes.
Half to
three-fourths of them have one or more low-socioeconomic disadvantages, and the
lowest socioeconomic categories have the highest smoking rates. The study
concludes that continuing tobacco use is now concentrated among the least
advantaged portion of society.
"But with smoking, we
have this unusual situation: Americans with lower socioeconomic status today
are suffering from epidemic smoking rates, and they make up nearly
three-fourths of all our remaining smokers."
The research,
published February in the Journal of Health Care for the Poor and
Underserved, used data from a national survey which the University of
Colorado directed in 2012.
The continued epidemic
can't be blamed on lack of desire to quit or efforts to quit. According to the
report, numerous studies have found no socioeconomic differences in smokers'
desires to quit or attempts to quit.
Instead, the disparities persist and have
widened because lower socioeconomic smokers who try to quit are less likely to
succeed.
"In the last
half-century, public health efforts helped cut the smoking rate by more than
half, but we probably need to change our strategies for helping smokers quit,"
Levinson said.
"The methods that worked for the upper half of society
don't seem to be working well for the other half."
According to the
Centers for Disease Control, cigarette smoking remains the leading cause of
preventable disease and death in the US, causing more than 480,000 premature
deaths every year, or one of every five deaths.
Levinson said,
"Now the nation's public health system has a dual moral obligation toward
smokers of low socioeconomic class. We must eliminate the disparity in smoking
rates, and we must provide cessation-supporting services to the new majority of
smokers."