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Study: Workers Need Help to Quit Smoking

While most large employers have banned smoking at work, 78 percent of employees at smoke-free offices said the policy is not effective in motivating them to quit.

december 19, 2006

NEW YORK (AP) - Only 4 percent of large employers offer comprehensive programs to help employees quit smoking, despite higher health costs for smokers and smoking breaks that could cost employers nine weeks of lost productivity a year, according to a 2006 study by the American Journal of Health Promotion.

About 82 percent of employers said they should take steps to help their workers quit smoking, according to a separate survey released today by the National Business Group on Health, a nonprofit consortium of large employers that looks for solutions to health care problems.

While most large employers have banned smoking at work, 78 percent of employees at smoke-free offices said the policy is not effective in motivating them to quit.

In 1999, excess medical expenses due to smoking and smoking-related illnesses cost employers $1,850 per smoking employee, while lost productivity due to smoking and smoking-related illnesses cost employers $1,897 per smoking employee, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Smoke Free Society Corporation, a nonprofit organization solely dedicated to smoking and tobacco education, prevention and cessation puts this additional cost to employers for each employee who smokes at over $9,300 a year. (click here to read more)

Smoking needs to be treated as a chronic health condition, said Ron Finch, vice president at the Business Group.

"These survey results illustrate to employers and benefit managers the need to develop a comprehensive smoking cessation benefit plan," Finch said.

The survey of 508 employers and 510 employees who smoke has a margin of error of plus or minus 4.3 percentage points and was sponsored by Pfizer Inc., which makes an anti-smoking perscription pill, Chantix.

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More Americans die from
cigarette-related illnesses than car accidents, AIDS, alcohol, suicide, homicide and illegal drugs combined
!

Slightly more than half of Americans age 12 and older reported being current drinkers of alcohol!
That translates to 126 million people, up from 121 million people the year before
!

Smoking
leads to more than half of all cases of gum disease among American adults!

Source: Center for the Advancement of Health