
The impact of cigarette smoking on morbidity and mortality in the United States is well known. Economic consequences of these health effects-expenditures for medical care and the value of productive output lost-have been estimated in many ways. This original prevalence-based analysis of attributable risks indicates a staggering $54 billion cost to the nation. Concern over such misallocation of resources to harmful uses is demonstrably justified.
Author(s): Dorothy P. Rice; Thomas A. Hodgson; Peter Sinsheimer; Warren Browner; Andrea N. Kopstein
Volume 64, Issue 4
(pages 489–547)
Published in 1986