Mixed evidence for the compression of morbidity hypothesis for smoking elimination—a systematic literature review

Author:

Dieteren Charlotte M1,Faber Timor2,van Exel Job1,Brouwer Werner B F1,Mackenbach Johan P2ORCID,Nusselder Wilma J2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Health Economics, Erasmus University Rotterdam, Erasmus School of Health Policy & Management, Rotterdam, The Netherlands

2. Department of Public Health, Erasmus MC, University Medical Center, Rotterdam, The Netherlands

Abstract

Abstract Background There is debate around the composition of life years gained from smoking elimination. The aim of this study was to conduct a systematic review of the literature to synthesize existing evidence on the effect of smoking status on health expectancy and to examine whether smoking elimination leads to compression of morbidity. Methods Five databases were systematically searched for peer-reviewed articles. Studies that presented quantitative estimates of health expectancy for smokers and non-/never-smokers were eligible for inclusion. Studies were searched, selected and reviewed by two reviewers who extracted the relevant data and assessed the risk of bias of the included articles independently. Results The search identified 2491 unique records, whereof 20 articles were eligible for inclusion (including 26 cohorts). The indicators used to measure health included disability/activity limitations (n=9), health-related quality of life (EQ-5D) (n=2), weighted disabilities (n=1), self-rated health (n=9), chronic diseases (n=6), cardiovascular diseases (n=4) and cognitive impairment (n=1). Available evidence showed consistently that non-/never-smokers experience more healthy life years throughout their lives than smokers. Findings were inconsistent on the effect of smoking on the absolute number of unhealthy life years. Findings concerning the time proportionally spent unhealthy were less heterogeneous: nearly all included articles reported that non-/never-smokers experience relatively less unhealthy life years (e.g. relative compression of morbidity). Conclusions Support for the relative compression of morbidity due to smoking elimination was evident. Further research is needed into the absolute compression of morbidity hypothesis since current evidence is mixed, and methodology of studies needs to be harmonized.

Funder

Erasmus University Rotterdam and Timor Faber by the Erasmus Medical Centre

Netspar

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

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