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Report: Smokers Need More Help to Quit

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Report: Smokers Need More Help to Quit

Report: Smokers Need More Help to Quit


Lack of Insurance Coverage, ‘Political Will' Cited

June 14, 2006 -- Not enough Americans have access to methods that could help millions of smokers quit the habit, a government report concluded Wednesday.

Experts say that quitting methods are available that could triple generally low quit rates for nearly 45 million adult Americans who still smoke. But a lack of awareness of the treatments and a shortage of insurance coverage to pay for them mean that many smokers don't have access.

Meanwhile, 46 million Americans with no health insurance are largely on their own when it comes to finding ways to kick the habit.

"Most adult smokers want to quit," says David F. Ransohoff, MD, who chaired the National Institutes of Health panel that issued the report. "This gap represents a major national quality-of-care problem," he says.

Disease from tobacco use kills approximately 440,000 Americans each year. An estimated 4 million high-school-aged kids also smoke, and researchers are now expressing concern that smoking rates in that group are no longer on the decline.

Effective Treatments


Adults who try to quit on their own only succeed about one time in 20. Quitting methods including nicotine replacement therapy, prescription drugs, telephone quit lines, and in-person counseling and support groups can double or triple quit rates, if smokers know about them.

Research shows that combinations of pharmaceutical treatments -- along with counseling -- work better than either alone, according to the report.

"Smokers may not realize that there are effective treatments out there," says Marilou G. Tablang-Jimenez, MD, a psychiatrist and member of the NIH panel.

Increasing the price of cigarettes has been proven to drive down smoking rates, says Marshall Chin, MD, an associate professor of medicine at the University of Chicago, and another member of the panel. Many states have raised excise taxes on cigarettes, but overall, policy makers have "lacked the political will" to raise prices across the board, he notes.

Insurance Lacking


The report also pegged lack of insurance coverage as a major barrier to treatment. Ransohoff pointed out that many doctors cannot easily bill insurers for counseling patients or referring them to quit programs. That holds some physicians back from taking an active role in helping patients quit, he says.
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