Health and Economic Benefits of Tobacco Use Interventions
Commercial* tobacco use is the leading cause of preventable disease and death in the United States. 1 Cigarette smoking harms nearly every organ of the body and causes many diseases, including cancer, heart disease stroke, lung diseases, type 2 diabetes, and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD).
Secondhand smoke also causes stroke, lung cancer, and heart disease in adults. Children who are exposed to secondhand smoke are at increased risk for sudden infant death syndrome, slowed lung growth, acute respiratory infections, respiratory symptoms, middle ear disease, and more frequent and severe asthma. 1
* "Commercial tobacco" means harmful products that are made and sold by tobacco companies. It does not include "traditional tobacco" used by Indigenous groups for religious or ceremonial purposes.
Quick facts
- About 28 million U.S. adults smoke cigarettes, 2 and 58 million nonsmoking Americans are exposed to secondhand smoke. 3
- Cigarette smoking causes more than 480,000 deaths every year in the U.S., including 41,000 deaths from secondhand smoke. 1
- For every American who dies because of smoking, at least 30 are living with a serious smoking-related illness. That's more than 16 million Americans. 14
- Disparities related to commercial tobacco use, secondhand smoke exposure, and quitting exist across population groups. For example, American Indian and Alaska Native people have the highest prevalence of cigarette smoking compared to other racial and ethnic groups in the U.S. 2
- In 2021, 21.5% of adult Medicaid enrollees currently smoked cigarettes, compared to 8.6% of adults with private health insurance. 2
The high cost of tobacco use
Cigarette smoking cost the United States more than $600 billion in 2018, 5 including:
- More than $240 billion A in health care spending. 6
- Nearly $185 billion A in lost productivity from smoking-related illnesses and health conditions. 6
- Nearly $180 billion A in lost productivity from smoking-related premature death. 6
- $7 billion B in lost productivity from premature death from secondhand smoke exposure. 7
Strategies that work
CDC is committed to advancing health equity by reducing diseases and deaths caused by commercial tobacco use in all communities. These efforts can also help reduce smoking-related costs.
CDC and its partners work to prevent youth from starting to use tobacco products, eliminate exposure to secondhand smoke, help people quit, and reduce health disparities for groups at higher risk of chronic diseases caused by smokinghealth inequities and disparities related to tobacco product use.
For example, CDC's National and State Tobacco Control Program is the only nationwide initiative for comprehensive tobacco prevention and control efforts that supports all 50 states, the District of Columbia, 8 U.S. territories, and 26 tribes and tribal organizations.
CDC efforts have protected Americans from the risks of tobacco use and secondhand smoke exposure. For example:
- CDC's Tips From Former Smokers® (Tips®) campaign is the first federally funded tobacco education campaign focused on motivating U.S. adults who smoke to quit. Tips features real people from diverse backgrounds who are living with serious long-term health effects from smoking and secondhand smoke exposure.
- CDC connects people who smoke with resources to help them quit, including a free quitline portal, 1-800-QUIT- NOW, which links callers to their state quitline, as well as web-based, text-based, and app-based quit support resources.
- The percentage of the population covered by comprehensive state or local smoke-free laws has increased over the past 2 decades, with 62.7% of the U.S. population currently covered.
- CDC, states, territories, tribal organizations, and other partners have helped reduce cigarette smoking among U.S. adults from 20.9% (about 1 in every 5 adults) in 2005 to 11.5% (nearly 1 in every 9 adults) in 2021. 2
Effectiveness of the Tips campaign
During 2012–2018, CDC estimates that more than 16.4 million people who smoke have attempted to quit, and about 1 million have quit because of the Tips campaign. Tips prevented an estimated 129,000 early deaths and helped save an estimated $7.3 billion in smoking-related health care costs. 8
Benefits of using proven strategies
The Community Preventive Services Task Force (CPSTF) reviews health interventions to determine which are evidence-based and cost-effective.* For example:
- Comprehensive tobacco control programs are cost-effective, and savings from averted health care costs exceed intervention costs. 9
- A nationwide smokefree policy could save $700 to $1,297 C for each person not currently covered by a smokefree policy by preventing illness and reducing deaths from secondhand smoke exposure. 10
- Interventions that increase the price of tobacco products by 20% can save an average of $72 C per person per year in health care costs. 11
- Mass-reach health communication interventions to change knowledge, beliefs, attitudes, and behaviors affecting tobacco use. 12
* The CPSTF considers interventions cost-effective if they cost less than $50,000 per quality-adjusted life year gained.
On This Page
- Tobacco use in the United States
- The high cost of tobacco use
- Strategies that work
- Benefits of using proven strategies