Fishman Paul A, Khan Zeba M, Thompson Ella E, Curry Susan J
Center for Health Studies, Group Health Cooperative of Puget Sound, Seattle, WA 98101, USA.
Health Serv Res. 2003 Apr;38(2):733-49. doi: 10.1111/1475-6773.00142.
We estimate long-term health care costs of former smokers compared with continuing and never smokers using a retrospective cohort study of HMO enrollees. Previous research on health care costs associated with former smokers has suggested that quitters may incur greater health care costs than continuing smokers, therefore, getting people to quit creates more expensive health care consumers. We studied the trend in cost for former smokers over seven years after they quit to assess how the cessation experience impacts total health care cost.
DATA SOURCES/STUDY SETTING: Group Health Cooperative (GHC), a nonprofit mixed model health maintenance organization in western Washington state.
Retrospective cohort study using automated and primary data collected through telephone interviews.
We find that former smokers' costs are significantly greater (p<.05) in the year immediately following cessation relative to continuing smokers, but former smokers' costs fall in year two. This decrease maintains throughout the six-year follow-up period. Although former smokers cost more than continuing smokers in the year after cessation, this increase appears to be transient. Long-term costs for former smokers are not statistically different from those of continuing smokers and cumulative health care expenses are lower by the seventh year postquit. Our evidence suggests that smoking cessation does not increase long-term heath care costs.
Health care costs among former smokers increase relative to continuing smokers in the year after cessation but fall to a level that is statistically indistinguishable in the second year postquit. Any net increase in costs among former smokers relative to continuing smokers appears compensated for within two years post-quit and is maintained for at least six years after cessation.
我们通过对健康维护组织(HMO)参保者进行回顾性队列研究,估算曾经吸烟者与持续吸烟者及从不吸烟者相比的长期医疗保健成本。先前关于曾经吸烟者相关医疗保健成本的研究表明,戒烟者可能比持续吸烟者产生更高的医疗保健成本,因此,促使人们戒烟会产生更昂贵的医疗保健消费者。我们研究了曾经吸烟者戒烟后七年的成本趋势,以评估戒烟经历如何影响总体医疗保健成本。
数据来源/研究背景:华盛顿州西部的非营利性混合模式健康维护组织——集团健康合作社(GHC)。
采用通过电话访谈收集的自动化数据和原始数据进行回顾性队列研究。
我们发现,与持续吸烟者相比,曾经吸烟者在戒烟后的第一年成本显著更高(p<0.05),但在第二年成本下降。这种下降在六年的随访期内一直持续。尽管曾经吸烟者在戒烟后的第一年成本高于持续吸烟者,但这种增加似乎是短暂的。曾经吸烟者的长期成本与持续吸烟者在统计学上没有差异,并且在戒烟后第七年累计医疗保健费用更低。我们的证据表明,戒烟不会增加长期医疗保健成本。
曾经吸烟者的医疗保健成本在戒烟后的第一年相对于持续吸烟者有所增加,但在戒烟后第二年降至统计学上无法区分的水平。曾经吸烟者相对于持续吸烟者的成本任何净增加在戒烟后两年内似乎都得到了补偿,并在戒烟后至少六年内保持。