
Medical Costs of Cigarette Smoking among Employees in a Company
Author(s) -
Osaki Yoneatsu,
Anada Kimiko,
Minowa Masumi
Publication year - 1996
Publication title -
journal of occupational health
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.664
H-Index - 59
ISSN - 1348-9585
DOI - 10.1539/joh.38.63
Subject(s) - medicine , medical costs , per capita , epidemiology , public health , cigarette smoking , medical care , health care , environmental health , demography , consumption (sociology) , population , gerontology , family medicine , nursing , social science , sociology , economics , economic growth
Medical Costs of Cigarette Smoking among Employees in a Company: Yoneatsu Osaki, et at. Department of Epidemiology, Institute of Public Health —We analyzed the association between smoking status and medical costs for employees in a company to determine the direct influence of smoking on medical costs. Data on smoking status and cigarette consumption per day were linked to data on individual medical costs. Data for 1,381 persons out of 1,531 employees in a given age group were analyzed. The age range and mean age of the subjects were 30‐75 and 41.5 + 7.4 years old, respectively. The proportion of employees who received any medical care was not significantly different among smokers, ex‐smokers, and non‐smokers. Although the average per capita costs (hereafter referred to as population average costs) by age group were not significantly different by smoking status, the medical costs for smokers tended to be lower than those of ex‐smokers and non‐smokers. When the medical costs per employee who received any medical care were compared among the three smoking status groups, a similar association was observed. No significant dose‐response relationship between cigarette consumption and medical costs was observed statistically. These results indicate that medical costs for smokers are not higher than those for other smoking status groups. These results do not support antismoking measures in the workplace, but may be due to a small sample size, because no cases of death or malignant respiratory disease with the accompanying higher medical costs were observed during the study. A large sample study observing a direct relationship between smoking status and medical costs is therefore required for a more appropriate example of the harmfulness of smoking in the workplace.