| Smoking
Deaths Cost in Productivity
CDC Reports That Early Deaths From
Smoking
Cost $92 Billion in Lost Productivity 1997-2001
ATLANTA Jun 30, 2005
— Early deaths caused by smoking cost the nation about $92
billion a year in lost productivity between 1997 and 2001, the Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention reported Thursday.
Smoking reduces life
expectancy an average of about 14 years by way of lung cancer, heart
disease other illnesses, according to the CDC.
In the study, "lost
productivity" meant lost wages. The CDC gave no overall estimate
of the smoking-related health-care costs over the same five-year
period, but estimated them at $75.5 billion in 1998 alone.
The report also found
that 438,000 people died each year between 1997 and 2001 because
of smoking or exposure to secondhand smoke. That compares with 440,000
a year between 1995 and 1999.
"Cigarette
smoking continues to impose substantial health and financial costs
on individuals and society," CDC Director Dr. Julie Gerberding
said. "We've made good progress in reducing the number of people
who smoke, but we have much more work to do."
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