Dr.
Phil Cole and I asserted in 2008 that smoking-related deaths in the U.S were on
the decline. Finally, this month, an FDA official arrived at the same conclusion
in a journal article.
In “Calculating the Big Kill,” which appeared in
Regulation, the Cato Institute’s
flagship publication (here), I made the case
that “CDC [Centers for Disease Control and Prevention] estimates of
smoking-related deaths do not add up.” I
noted that “U.S. smoking rates have been declining almost continuously since
the mid-1960s, when 42 percent of American adults smoked. The rate dropped to 28 percent in 1988 and
has now declined to 21 percent. Put
simply, the proportion of Americans who smoke has been cut in half over the
past 40 years.”
I asked, “Why have the CDC [big-kill] estimates not fallen?”
My question was based on a
research study that Dr. Cole and I published a year earlier in Nicotine and Tobacco Research (abstract
here), showing that
“there were 402,000 deaths attributable to smoking in 1987 and 322,000 in 2002.” We noted that despite the substantial decline
in smoking prevalence, the estimate of smoking-attributable deaths from the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention had changed hardly at all.
Five years later, my question is still relevant. The answer is clear: The CDC chose not to acknowledge the fact that deaths had plummeted.
Five years later, my question is still relevant. The answer is clear: The CDC chose not to acknowledge the fact that deaths had plummeted.
Brian Rostron, a scientist at the
FDA, has now published a study, also in Nicotine
and Tobacco Research (abstract here),
demonstrating that smoking-attributable deaths declined from 398,000 in 2000 to
370,000 in 2007.
As I explained in my Cato
article, most people mistakenly believe that CDC officials actually count the
number of smokers who die each year. The
truth is that the CDC uses a model that estimates the number of current and
former smokers based upon data in the National Health Interview Survey (NHIS);
the CDC subjects those smoker estimates to relative risks developed by the
American Cancer Society in the 1980s, and then produces an estimate of the
number of deaths that would not have occurred if they had never smoked. Like any model, the quality of the output is
dependent on the quality of the input.
I had noted that the CDC was
using 20-year-old data to produce its “big-kill” estimates; Dr. Rostron concurs,
saying that “the CDC has not substantially revised the methodology or data that
are used in this procedure since their introduction in the 1980s.”
Rather than using decades-old
risk estimates, Dr. Rostron updated the relative risks for smokers and former
smokers by calculating them from NHIS subjects from 1997 to 2004 who were
followed through 2006 with linkage to the National Death Index. Unlike the outdated CDC estimates, he adjusted
risks for age, race/ethnicity, education, alcohol consumption and body mass
index, which are important confounding factors for some or all smoking-related
diseases.
Here are Dr. Rostron’s big-kill
estimates:
Smoking-Attributable Deaths Among Men and Women in the U.S., 2000, 2004 and 2007 | |||
---|---|---|---|
Year | Men | Women | All |
2000 | 211,000 | 187,000 | 398,000 |
2004 | 200,000 | 180,000 | 380,000 |
2007 | 195,000 | 175,000 | 370,000 |
Although declining, Dr. Rostron’s big-kill numbers may still be too high because of the way he estimated deaths among former smokers. Using his model, former smokers accounted for about 177,000 out of the 370,000 deaths from smoking in 2007. This seems to be excessively high, as the 2007 NHIS documents that 60% of the 39 million former smokers had quit over 15 years previously. Any excess risk for a smoking-attributable death was minimal to nonexistent in this group.
Dr. Rostron’s deaths among former
smokers were likely concentrated in those who quit less than 5 years earlier, and
who therefore have risks similar to those of current smokers. But it is inconceivable that this group of
6.3 million former smokers produced almost as many deaths as the 27.5 million
current smokers in 2007. Dr. Rostron’s
model should be revised to reflect the different risks among former smokers who
have short or long quitting histories.
Regardless, the main message of
this study is valid: Smoking-attributable deaths have been in decline for over
a decade. This is good news that the CDC
and other federal agencies have ignored for far too many years.
6 comments:
There are as many smokers today in america as there were in the 1960s about 50-60 million.
"Unlike the outdated CDC estimates, he adjusted risks for age, race/ethnicity, education, alcohol consumption and body mass index, which are important confounding factors for some or all smoking-related diseases."
...Makes sense, but why did he not also adjust for # of cigarettes smoked (per day) and for # of years at that rate, etc.? It seems logical to assume that if this factor would have been included in the overall assessment (ie., 5 cigarettes a day are not the same as 20-40 etc..), the numbers would have come out even lower.
Both of these comments are insightful. According to CDC reports, there were 50 million adult smokers in the U.S. in 1965, and total cigarette consumption was 529 billion. Today there are about 45 million adult smokers, and total cigarette consumption is less than 280 billion. The models for smoking-attributable deaths probably do not accommodate these dramatic differences.
Brad,
"Today there are about 45 million adult smokers, and total cigarette consumption is less than 280 billion."
Wowza! That's a huge reduction in the amount of cigarettes smoked! Many smokers today have made a conscious decision to smoke less. I know that I do (I've never been a heavy smoker n the first place). Lord knows that there has GOT to be a difference between heavy smoking vs. light smoking.
"The models for smoking-attributable deaths probably do not accommodate these dramatic differences."
TC appears to be operating on an outdated model..... How are we supposed to get to the truth when we aren't even operating in the 21st century?
Do you have any insight as to why smoking related deaths are lower in Japan despite a greater smoking rate?
Japan represents an idiosyncrasy with respect to smoking-attributable deaths. The death toll is not trivial (101,000 among men and 27,000 among women in 2009, according to Peto, http://www.ctsu.ox.ac.uk/~tobacco/C3160.pdf ), but it is considerably lower than other developed countries with similar smoking rates. The idiosyncrasy may be due to smoking behavior (inhalation depth, frequency).
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