Budgetary impact from multiple perspectives of sustained antitobacco national media campaigns to reduce the harms of cigarette smoking

Author:

Maciosek Michael VORCID,Armour Brian S,Babb Stephen D,Dehmer Steven P,Grossman Elizabeth S,Homa David M,LaFrance Amy B,Rodes Robert,Wang Xu,Xu Zack,Yang Zhuo,Roy Kakoli

Abstract

BackgroundHigh-intensity antitobacco media campaigns are a proven strategy to reduce the harms of cigarette smoking. While buy-in from multiple stakeholders is needed to launch meaningful health policy, the budgetary impact of sustained media campaigns from multiple payer perspectives is unknown.MethodsWe estimated the budgetary impact and time to breakeven from societal, all-payer, Medicare, Medicaid and private insurer perspectives of national antitobacco media campaigns in the USA. Campaigns of 1, 5 and 10 years of durations were assessed in a microsimulation model to estimate the 10 and 20-year health and budgetary impact. Simulation model inputs were obtained from literature and both pubic use and proprietary data sets.ResultsThe microsimulation predicts that a 10-year national smoking cessation campaign would produce net savings of $10.4, $5.1, $1.4, $3.6 and $0.2 billion from the societal, all-payer, Medicare, Medicaid and private insurer perspectives, respectively. National antitobacco media campaigns of 1, 5 and 10-year durations could produce net savings for Medicaid and Medicare within 2 years, and for private insurers within 6–9 years. A 10-year campaign would reduce adult cigarette smoking prevalence by 1.2 percentage points, prevent 23 500 smoking-attributable deaths over the first 10 years. In sensitivity analysis, media campaign costs would be offset by reductions in medical care spending of smoking among all payers combined within 6 years in all tested scenarios.Conclusions1, 5 and 10-year antitobacco media campaigns all yield net savings within 10 years from all perspectives. Multiyear campaigns yield substantially higher savings than a 1-year campaign.

Funder

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Health (social science)

Reference50 articles.

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3. Tobacco Product Use Among Adults — United States, 2017

4. Quitting Smoking Among Adults - United States, 2000-2015;Babb;MMWR Morb Mortal Wkly Rep,2017

5. Guide to Community Preventive Services . Reducing tobacco use and Secondhand smoke exposure: Mass-Reach health communication interventions, 2013. Available: http://www.thecommunityguide.org/tobacco/massreach.html [Accessed 10 Feb 2014].

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