Pubdate: Tue, 27 Jun 2000
Source: Reuters
Copyright: 2000 Reuters Limited.
Author: Deborah Charles

US URGES SMOKERS TO KICK THE HABIT WITH MEDICATION

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. surgeon general on Tuesday urged doctors and
insurance companies to prescribe and pay for medication that can help
millions of Americans stop smoking.

Surgeon General Dr. David Satcher released guidelines intended to show
doctors and smokers how to quit successfully. The report identified the
various therapies -- including drugs, nicotine gum, patches, inhalers and
counseling -- that can help smokers kick the habit.

``There has never been a better time for health professionals to help their
patients break free from the deadly chronic disease we know as tobacco
addiction,'' said Satcher.

``Starting today, every doctor, nurse, health plan, purchaser, and medical
school in America should make treating tobacco dependence a top priority,''
he said.

President Clinton issued an executive memorandum directing all federal
departments and agencies to encourage their employees to stop or never start
smoking and to provide information on proven smoking-cessation treatments.

``Tobacco addiction and related health disorders pose one of the greatest
public health threats facing our nation today,'' Clinton said in a
statement. ``Over 400,000 Americans die every year from tobacco related
diseases -- more than AIDS, illegal drugs, alcohol, fires, car accidents,
murders and suicides combined.''

The Department of Health and Human Services said in a statement that smoking
is the single biggest preventable cause of illness and premature death in
the United States.

It said people who smoke are at increased risk of heart disease, cancer and
other smoking-related illnesses that contribute to more than 430,000 deaths
a year. Nationwide, medical care costs attributable to smoking or
smoking-related diseases have been estimated to be more than $50 billion
annually.

The guidelines released on Tuesday, which will be included in the June 28
issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association, provide new
information on the most effective counseling strategies and recommend five
specific medications that can help increase quitting rates.

Millions Of Smokers Try To Quit -- And Fail

Dr. Michael Fiore, who chaired the panel that developed the guidelines, said
studies show 70 percent of the 50 million smokers in America say they have
tried to quit smoking at least once but had failed.

``Every year about 20 million smokers try to quit, but only about one
million of them stay off,'' said Fiore, director of the Center for Tobacco
Research and Intervention at the University of Wisconsin at Madison. ``The
reason is the majority of them try to quit cold turkey and have failed.''

He compared tobacco dependence to other chronic diseases such as high blood
pressure or diabetes that require repeated medical intervention before they
can be controlled.

According to Fiore, less than half of insurance plans pay the $200 to $400
it costs to help those covered by the plans to quit smoking although they do
pay for the treatment of diseases caused by smoking such as heart attack,
stroke and cancer.

The guidelines call for tobacco dependence to be considered a chronic
disease, and recommend that ``clinicians be reimbursed for providing tobacco
dependence treatment just as they would be for other chronic conditions.''

``We actually have more potential today to effectively treat tobacco
dependence than we do any of the other chronic diseases in the United
States,'' Fiore said, adding that the panel's investigations showed how much
better a person can successfully quit using certain medications than on
their own.

``It's our hope that with the release of these guidelines, the number of
people who quit each year will at least double to two million,'' he said.

The guidelines are aimed at doctors -- many of whom say they have not been
adequately trained to help their patients stop smoking -- insurers, and
smokers.

In his statement, Clinton also urged Congress to approve his budget proposal
to ensure that every state Medicaid health insurance program for the poor
covers prescription and non-prescription smoking cessation drugs.
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