Global and regional estimates of the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of price increases and other tobacco control policies.
The objective of this study was to provide conservative estimates of the global and regional effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of tobacco control policies. Using a static model of the cohort of smokers alive in 1995, we estimated the number of smoking-attributable deaths that could be averted by: (1) price increases, (2) nicotine replacement therapy (NRT), and (3) a package of non-price interventions other than NRT. We calculated the cost-effectiveness of these policy interventions by weighing the approximate public-sector costs against the years of healthy life saved, measured in disability-adjusted life years, or DALYs. Even with deliberately conservative assumptions, tax increases that would raise the real price of cigarettes by 10% worldwide would prevent between 5 and 16 million tobacco-related deaths, and could cost 3-70 US dollars per DALY saved in low-income and middle-income regions. NRT and a package of non-price interventions other than NRT are also cost-effective in low-income and middle-income regions, at 280-870 US dollars per DALY and 36-710 US dollars per DALY, respectively. In high-income countries, price increases were found to have a cost-effectiveness of 83-2771 US dollars per DALY, NRT 750-7206 US dollars per DALY and other non-price interventions 696-13,924 US dollars per DALY. Tobacco control policies, particularly tax increases on cigarettes, are cost-effective relative to other health interventions. Our estimates are subject to considerable variation in actual settings; thus, local cost-effectiveness studies are required to guide local policy.
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Keywords | Adult, Africa/epidemiology, Asia/epidemiology, Commerce/*economics, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Demography, Europe/epidemiology, Female, Human, Male, Middle East/epidemiology, Nicotine/*economics, Public Health/*economics, Support, Non-U.S. Gov't, Tobacco Use Disorder/*economics/mortality/*prevention & control, Adult, Africa, epidemiology, Asia, epidemiology, Commerce, economics, Cost-Benefit Analysis, Demography, Europe, epidemiology, Female, Human, Male, Middle East, epidemiology, Nicotine, economics, Public Health, economics, Support, Non-U.S. Gov't, Tobacco Use Disorder, economics, mortality, prevention & control |