| Tobacco
Money, Going Up in Smoke!
None
of the settlement money has been spent on tobacco control to reduce
costs to the Medicaid program! At the same time, the District's
adult smoking rate has gone from 18.8 percent in 1998 to 21 percent
in 2004.
The 1998 settlement
between the District and leading cigarette manufacturers pulled
the city out of financial peril and created a $250 million rainy-day
fund. The settlement money was intended to mitigate health-care
expenditures related to smoking.
But none of the settlement
money has been spent on tobacco control to reduce costs to the Medicaid
program. At the same time, the District's adult smoking rate has
gone from 18.8 percent in 1998 to 21 percent in 2004. Among Washington's
Medicaid recipients, the smoking rate is a whopping 35 percent.
Smoking is the most preventable cause of premature death in the
District. It is a major risk factor for cardiovascular disease,
accounts for 30 percent of all cancer deaths and causes most cases
of emphysema and chronic bronchitis.
Mayor Anthony A.
Williams wants to issue bonds for the tobacco settlement payments
from 2026 to 2040 to give the District a cash infusion of about
$200 million for discretionary use. But before that money is locked
into other projects, some of it should go to tobacco control.
A little more 13
percent of D.C. residents under the age of 18 smoke; that figures
jumps to aforementioned 21 percent among adults. That increase can
be attributed at least in part to a lack of prevention programs
for young people.
According to the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, more than 60 percent
of smokers in the District attempted to quit in 2004. However, the
high cost of nicotine replacement medications and of smoking-cessation
counseling makes that especially difficult for low-income people.
The same report found that smokers who live above the poverty line
had greater success in quitting.
The 2000 Census reported
that 20 percent of D.C. residents live below the poverty line. The
national average is 12.4 percent. This helps to explain why the
District has the 10th-worst success rate in smoking cessation in
the nation when compared with the states.
Meanwhile, the District
is experiencing the repercussions of all this tobacco use. It has
a higher incidence of 11 types of cancers -- including lung cancer
-- than any state. It pays $72 million each year in Medicaid costs
for smoking-related illnesses and more than $224 million overall
in smoking-related costs.
The District needs
to invest in preventative measures instead of just continuing to
pay the rising costs of treating sick smokers. The D.C. Council
has an opportunity to allocate significant funds to support a sustainable
tobacco control effort in the District in the budget for fiscal
2007. A comprehensive prevention program for youth and a cessation
program would lead to fewer smokers and lower health-care costs
for the city.
The D.C. Tobacco
Coalition supports a $10 million investment in this effort to be
spread over the next three years. That may seem like a lot of money,
but it is a fraction of the smoking-related health-care costs the
District pays each year. To alleviate the health and financial burdens
of tobacco, the District must give its citizens the knowledge and
means to overcome their addiction.
-- Aaron Tallent
chairs the nonprofit
D.C. Tobacco Coalition.
Aaron.Tallent@heart.org
Washington
Post
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