Smoking & Tobacco Use
http://www.cdc.gov/tobacco/data_statistics/fact_sheets/fast_facts/
Fast Facts
Morbidity and Mortality
Tobacco use leads to disease and disability.
- Smoking causes cancer, heart disease, stroke, and lung diseases (including emphysema, bronchitis, and chronic airway obstruction).1
- For every person who dies from a smoking-related disease, 20 more people suffer with at least one serious illness from smoking.2
Tobacco use is the leading preventable cause of death.
- Worldwide, tobacco use causes more than 5 million deaths per year, and current trends show that tobacco use will cause more than 8 million deaths annually by 2030.3
- In the United States, smoking is responsible for about one in five deaths annually (i.e., about 443,000 deaths per year, and an estimated 49,000 of these smoking-related deaths are the result of secondhand smoke exposure).1
- On average, smokers die 13 to 14 years earlier than nonsmokers.4
Costs and Expenditures
The cigarette industry spends billions each year on advertising and promotions.5
- $8.05 billion total spent in 2010
- $22 million spent a day in 2010
Tobacco use costs the United States billions of dollars each year.
- Cigarette smoking costs more than $193 billion (i.e., $97 billion in lost productivity plus $96 billion in health care expenditures).1
- Secondhand smoke costs more than $10 billion (i.e., health care expenditures, morbidity, and mortality).6
State spending on tobacco control does not meet CDC-recommended levels.7,8
- Collectively, states have billions of dollars available to them—from tobacco excise taxes and tobacco industry legal settlements—for preventing and controlling tobacco use. States currently use a very small percentage of these funds for tobacco control programs.
- In 2013, states will collect $25.7 billion from tobacco taxes and legal settlements, but states are spending less than 2% of the $25.7 billion on tobacco control programs.
- Investing only about 15% (i.e., $3.7 billion) of the $25.7 billion would fund every state tobacco control program at CDC-recommended levels.