Rajagiri College of Social Sciences, Kochi, Kerala, India.
International Research, Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids, Washington, DC, USA.
Nicotine Tob Res. 2022 Aug 6;24(9):1478-1486. doi: 10.1093/ntr/ntac048.
In India, 38.7% of adults are exposed to SHS at home and 30.2% at work. This paper estimates the direct economic costs of diseases attributable to secondhand smoking (SHS) in India for persons aged 15 years and above.
Nationally representative data on healthcare expenditures, healthcare utilization, and SHS prevalence were used to estimate economic costs attributable to SHS. A prevalence-based attributable risk approach was used for estimating the attributable direct costs. To estimate the SHS-attributable fraction, the excess utilization of healthcare among SHS exposed non-smokers compared to unexposed non-smokers was estimated using a method of propensity score matching (PSM).
The annual direct economic costs attributable to SHS from all diseases in India in the year 2017 for persons aged more than 15 years amounted to INR 566.7 billion (USD 8.7 billion). This amounted to INR 705 per adult non-smoker. The SHS attributable costs were higher among the youngest age group 20 to 24, and women bear 71% of the direct medical costs attributable to SHS.
The annual direct economic costs of SHS amount to approximately 0.33% of India's Gross Domestic Product (GDP), or 8.1% of total healthcare expenditures in India. It is also much larger than the total excise tax revenue from cigarettes and bidis. As bidi smoking is the most popular form of smoking in India and bidis are mostly consumed by the poor, a disproportionate burden of SHS is likely borne by poor households in India.
In India, 38.7% of adults are exposed to SHS at home and 30.2% at work. However, there is no estimate of the economic burden of any kind from SHS exposure in India. This study used a prevalence-based attributable risk approach combined with a PSM technique to estimate excess healthcare utilization for SHS exposed non-smokers and the annual direct economic costs of SHS in India. Annual direct SHS-attributable costs in India is INR 566.7 billion (USD 8.7 billion) SHS costs constituted 0.33% of GDP and 8.1% of healthcare expenditures in India.
在印度,38.7%的成年人在家中、30.2%的成年人在工作场所接触到二手烟。本文旨在评估印度因二手烟暴露导致的疾病给 15 岁及以上人群带来的直接经济成本。
本研究使用具有全国代表性的医疗支出、医疗保健利用率和二手烟暴露率数据来估计与二手烟有关的经济成本。采用基于流行率的归因风险方法来估算归因于二手烟的直接成本。为了估算二手烟暴露的非吸烟者与未暴露的非吸烟者之间过度使用医疗保健的归因风险比,我们采用倾向评分匹配(PSM)方法进行估算。
2017 年,印度 15 岁以上人群因所有疾病导致的与二手烟有关的直接经济成本为 5667 亿印度卢比(87 亿美元)。这相当于每个非吸烟者每年 705 印度卢比。在 20 至 24 岁年龄组中,二手烟归因成本最高,女性承担 71%的与二手烟有关的直接医疗费用。
二手烟的年直接经济成本约占印度国内生产总值(GDP)的 0.33%,或占印度总医疗支出的 8.1%。它也远高于香烟和比迪烟的总消费税收入。由于比迪烟是印度最受欢迎的吸烟形式,而且比迪烟主要由穷人消费,因此印度的贫困家庭可能承担了不成比例的二手烟负担。
在印度,38.7%的成年人在家中、30.2%的成年人在工作场所接触到二手烟。然而,印度没有对任何形式的二手烟暴露造成的经济负担进行估计。本研究采用基于流行率的归因风险方法,并结合 PSM 技术,估算了暴露于二手烟的非吸烟者过度使用医疗保健的情况以及印度每年因二手烟导致的直接经济成本。印度每年因二手烟导致的直接经济成本为 5667 亿印度卢比(8.7 亿美元)。二手烟成本占印度国内生产总值的 0.33%,占印度医疗支出的 8.1%。