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Smoking at record low in U.S.

But the good news not shared equally by all Americans

- By Karen Kaplan Los Angeles Times

Cigarette smoking is at an all-time low in the United States, but the benefits of this public health achievemen­t are not being shared equally by all Americans.

A new analysis of health data from the nation’s 500 largest cities shows that the people who live in neighborho­ods with the highest smoking rates are more likely to be poor, less likely to be white, and more likely to have chronic heart or lung diseases.

“The degree of inequity was surprising,” said study leader Eric Leas, who conducted the work at the Stanford Prevention Research Center.

Smoking may be a choice, but if you want to live a long and healthy life, it’s a bad one. In the U.S., life expectancy is at least 10 years lower for smokers than for nonsmokers, and smoking is responsibl­e for roughly 20 percent of deaths each year, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The U.S. surgeon general says smoking can be blamed for more than 80 percent of deaths due to lung cancer (the deadliest type of cancer in the U.S.) and about 80 percent of deaths due to chronic obstructiv­e pulmonary disease (the country’s third-leading cause of death). Smokers also face increased risks of heart disease, stroke, asthma, diabetes, and at least 10 other kinds of cancer.

In 1965, when the National Center for Health Statistics began tracking tobacco use, 42 percent of U.S. adults were cigarette smokers. By 2017, that figure had declined to 14 percent.

Leas and his former Stanford colleagues wondered how the health gains were spread across the country. To find out, they examined data from the 500 Cities Project, a joint effort of the CDC and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation that gauges health risk factors in 27,204 census tracts in America’s largest cities.

They found that smoking was more popular in some census tracts than others — and that there were certain things these census tracts had in common.

For starters, the people living in neighborho­ods with higher smoking rates tended to make less money than people in neighborho­ods with lower smoking rates. The researcher­s calculated that a $10,000 increase in a census tract’s median household income correspond­ed with a 0.92 percentage-point decrease in smoking prevalence.

In addition, neighborho­ods with higher smoking rates were more likely to be populated by AfricanAme­ricans and Latinos, while the reverse was true for non-Hispanic whites. A 10 percentage-point increase in a census tract’s white population correspond­ed with a 0.84 percentage-point decrease in the prevalence of smoking.

The Stanford team also found that the popularity of smoking and the prevalence of diseases rose or fell in tandem. For instance, if the smoking rate in a neighborho­od were to increase from 10.7 percent to 27.6 percent, the prevalence of coronary heart disease would rise by 27 percent, asthma would jump by 39 percent, and chronic obstructiv­e pulmonary disease would climb by 120 percent.

In each of the 500 cities, the researcher­s quantified the degree of “smoking prevalence inequity” on a scale from 0 (perfect equity) to 1 (complete inequity). All cities in the study had a score of at least 0.03, representi­ng at least a small degree of inequity, and the bulk of them had scores between 0.1 and 0.15. The most inequitabl­e city in America was Washington, D.C., with a score of 0.23.

Leas said he was amazed by the difference­s in the nation’s capital: The smoking prevalence in some neighborho­ods was 8.8 percent, while in others it reached 49.1 percent.

“A rate of 49.1 percent is higher even than where the national average was in the 1960s, highlighti­ng how far many neighborho­ods need to come to catch up to the national trends,” said Leas.

Health experts make a distinctio­n between inequaliti­es and inequities. Some amount of health inequality may be unavoidabl­e, such as when a genetic variant makes a person more vulnerable to a particular disease. However, when an unequal outcome could have been avoided, you have a case of inequity.

The researcher­s proposed several policy measures to combat the inequities they documented.

For instance, people in neighborho­ods with higher smoking rates were more likely to encounter stores selling cigarettes and other tobacco products. Regulation­s aimed at “limiting the quantity, location, and type of tobacco retailers” in an area might lead to less smoking there, they wrote.

Raising taxes on cigarettes to make them more expensive would probably reduce demand among lowincome smokers, helping to erase some of the inequity, they added. The findings also suggest that smoking cessation programs would do more good if they were “targeted to resource-poor communitie­s.”

The study was published by the journal JAMA Internal Medicine.

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ALAN BERNER/SEATTLE TIMES

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