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On Sun, 14 Jan 2007 19:12:22 GMT, Short Wave Sportfishing
wrote: On Sun, 14 Jan 2007 09:35:38 -0500, "JimH" wrote: "Harry Krause" wrote in message ... On 1/14/2007 9:18 AM, JimH wrote: "Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message ... On Sat, 13 Jan 2007 22:47:01 -0500, Harry Krause wrote: On 1/13/2007 10:31 PM, JimH wrote: "Calif Bill" wrote in message news:rchqh.14082 I would guess that it is a lot greater number than that. Overall, smoking does not cost the non smoking taxpayer anything. Huh? Studies show that cigarettes bring in a lot more money in taxes than are paid out in health care costs. And smokers die a few years earlier than non smokers, so there is less Social Security and Medicare paid out. Very simple equation. Please tell the insurance companies to reduce my health care insurance premiums as smokers do not have any impact on their costs. I am a taxpayer and the health care costs of smokers impact my health care premiums. Damned straight it does. For several years, I had direct access to a huge database of insurance information, including comparative statistics on smokers and non-smokers. Smokers without exception had substantially more hits against the insurance for all sorts of reasons. What we are getting here is obfuscation and rationalization from smokers . Smoking in the home where children are present ought to be a serious misdemeanor and if repeated, a felony. Fortunately, almost all the good restaurants in these here parts have banned smoking, and smoking is also banned in almost all office buildings downtown. I hope it is next banned from the sidewalks in front of buildings. Who the hell wants to smell the stench created by a cigarette smoker? Blech. In terms of health dollars, drinking alcohol causes more health problems in terms of dollars spent than smoking. According to these articles smokers cost us $73 billion in health care. http://www.berkeley.edu/news/berkele...6/smoking.html http://www.cancer.org/docroot/NWS/co...o_Business.asp According to this article excessive drinkers cost us $35 billion in health care. http://www.forbes.com/2006/08/22/hea...0822costs.html Also (from the ACS link): Statistics related to the cost to business of employee tobacco use include the following data from published reports: Cigarette smokers are absent from work 6.5 days per year more than nonsmokers. Approximately eight percent of a smokers working hours are spent on smoking rituals. Smokers make about six more visits to health care facilities per year than nonsmokers. In a study of health care utilization in 20,831 employees of a single, large employer, smokers had more hospital admissions per 1,000 (124 vs. 76 admissions), a longer average length of stay (6.47 vs. 5.03 days), higher average costs for outpatient visits ($122 vs. $75), and a higher average insured payment for health care ($1,145 vs. $762). Average lifetime medical care costs for male smokers are 32 percent higher than for men who have never smoked. For female smokers, that cost is 24 percent. Your stats match the trends I saw when I had access to insurance company statistics. Most smokers smoke all day long. Most drinkers are occasional drinkers, and might go weeks or months between a drink or two. I had a beer in November at Mexican restaurant, and haven't had another since. I had a margarita New Year's Eve, and haven't had another hard drink since. Smokers are as self-deluding as alcoholics. There is no doubt that drunk drivers kill thousands annually. And I am sure Tom's viewpoint is somewhat biased based on his service with the EMT's and seeing folks killed on the road from drunk drivers. But there is also no doubt that smoking (including the effects of second hand smoke) is more of a killer and a drain on our health care dollars. "In the most recent cost study, Rice and co-workers estimated that the cost to society of alcohol abuse was $70.3 billion in 1985 (4); a previous study by Harwood and colleagues estimated that the cost for 1980 was $89 billion (3). By adjusting cost estimates for the effects of inflation and the growth of the population over time, Rice projected that the total cost of alcohol abuse in 1988 was $85.9 billion, and Harwood projected that the cost in 1983 was $116 billion (3)." "Rice and co-workers calculated a cost of $6.3 billion for treatment of the medical consequences of alcohol abuse and treatment of alcohol dependence in all settings in 1985, and in addition, nearly $500 million for support costs, such as the costs of training medical staffs (4). In the prior study, Harwood and co-workers estimated that in 1980, such treatment costs were more than $9 billion, and support costs were nearly $1 billion (3)." "This "human capital" approach is standard in cost-of-illness studies, including the studies by Rice and Harwood. Critics of this approach contend that it understates the value of human life, especially for women and retired people (8,15,17). Using the "human capital" approach, Rice estimated that the costs of premature deaths due to alcohol abuse were $24 billion in 1985 (4), and Harwood estimated that they were $14.5 billion in 1980 (3). " "I wish to emphasize that the costs of treating alcoholism are only a minority of total alcohol-related health costs; medical consequences of alcohol use--trauma, cirrhosis, pancreatitis, and so forth--account for the majority. Perhaps if patients at risk for alcohol-related problems were identified before repeated traumas or health problems occur, these costs might be reduced." Add it up - close to160 BILLION in 1980 dollars and that doesn't include medical consequences as the author stated. And check this out from 1992. http://www.nida.nih.gov/economiccosts/Chapter1.html#1.2 There an interesting graph at the bottom of this above report - about two to one as I stated. So, I'll ask again - why not restrictive taxes and use of alcohol? That would be fine with me! Alcohol should be taxed at least as much as tobacco, in my opinion. -- ****************************************** ***** Have a super day! ***** ****************************************** John H |
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