Abstract

The objective of this study was to assess disparities in health care utilization, by smoking status, among adults in the United States. We used 1999–2004 National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) data from 15,332 adults. Multivariate logistic regressions were used to examine the relationship between smoking status (current, former, and never smoker), with health care utilization. After controlling for demographic characteristics, current smokers and former smokers who quit either <2 years or ≥10 years prior to the survey were more likely to have had inpatient admission in the past year than never smokers. Current smokers did not differ from never smokers on whether they had an outpatient visit in the past year. They were, however, more likely than never smokers to have ≥4 outpatient visits. Smokers who quit either <2 years ago or ≥10 years ago were more likely to have had an outpatient visit than never smokers. Former smokers were more likely than never smokers to have ≥4 outpatient visits regardless of when they quit. Our results show that cigarette smoking is associated with higher health care utilization for current and former smokers than for never smokers. Frequent hospitalization and outpatient visits translate into higher medical costs. Therefore, more efforts are needed to promote interventions that discourage smoking initiation and encourage cessation.

Highlights

  • Tobacco use is the leading preventable cause of morbidity and mortality in the United States [1]

  • They observed that former smokers increased their average outpatient visits by approximately two visits during the first year of cessation, while outpatient health care use was relatively unchanged among continuing smokers [10]

  • Increases in health care utilization during the first year of cessation may be due to follow-up care for an acute health event or recurrence of the acute health event that led to the decision to quit smoking [11]

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Summary

Introduction

Tobacco use is the leading preventable cause of morbidity and mortality in the United States [1]. The annual economic cost of smoking in the United States is estimated at $193 billion ($96 billion in direct health care expenditures and $97 billion in lost productivity) [3,4] Both current smokers and former smokers experience higher health care utilization and incur higher medical expenditures than never smokers [5,6,7,8,9]. Data from randomized, controlled clinical trials indicate that differences in outpatient and inpatient health care utilization by smoking status exist [10] They observed that former smokers increased their average outpatient visits by approximately two visits during the first year of cessation, while outpatient health care use was relatively unchanged among continuing smokers [10]. Increases in health care utilization during the first year of cessation may be due to follow-up care for an acute health event or recurrence of the acute health event that led to the decision to quit smoking [11]

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