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The economic impact of tobacco smoking and secondhand smoke exposure in Jordan: estimating the direct and indirect costs.

TitleThe economic impact of tobacco smoking and secondhand smoke exposure in Jordan: estimating the direct and indirect costs.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2024
AuthorsAlkhatib, NS, Massad, E, Rashdan, O, Max, W, Halloush, S, Abumansour, H, Alkhatib, A'a, Karasneh, RA, Al-Shatnawi, S, Qirim, T, Hawari, F, Alkhatib, S
JournalJ Med Econ
Volume27
Issue1
Pagination880-886
Date Published2024 Jan-Dec
ISSN1941-837X
KeywordsAdolescent, Adult, Aged, Cost of Illness, Female, Health Expenditures, Humans, Jordan, Male, Middle Aged, Models, Econometric, Prevalence, Tobacco Smoke Pollution, Tobacco Smoking, Young Adult
Abstract

AIM: To quantify the economic burden associated with tobacco smoking among smokers aged 30-69 years, and second-hand smokers (SHS) aged 15-69 years in Jordan.

MATERIALS AND METHODS: A prevalence-based analysis was conducted in alignment with the Economics of Tobacco Toolkit developed by the WHO. The time-horizon of the analysis was one year (2019). Direct and indirect costs were estimated using data from the 2019 Global Burden of Diseases study. The analysis targeted the Jordanian population of smokers aged 30-69 years, and SHS aged 15-69 years. Adjustments were applied for age, gender, and smoking-related diseases. Direct costs were estimated using the smoking-attributable fraction (SAF) and national health expenditures. Indirect costs were divided into morbidity and mortality components. A discount rate of 3.0% and an annual productivity growth rate of 1.0% were assumed in modelling future economic losses. A sensitivity analysis was conducted on the lower and upper estimates of data used in this study.

RESULTS: The cost of tobacco smoking and SHS exposure was estimated at US$2,108 million (95% confidence interval [CI] = US$2,003 million-US$2,245 million). This represents 4.7% (95%CI = 4.5%-5.0%) of national gross domestic product (GDP). Direct costs accounted for 3.1% of national GDP. Tobacco smoking accounted for 85.0% of total cost and SHS exposure accounted for 15.0% of total cost. Direct costs accounted for 67.0% of total cost, while indirect morbidity and mortality costs accounted for 9.0% and 24.0% of total cost, respectively. Non-communicable diseases accounted for 96.0% of total direct costs compared to communicable diseases (4.0% of total direct costs).

CONCLUSIONS: Smoking cessation interventions such as raising taxes on cigarettes, protecting people from tobacco smoke, warning labels, plain packaging, and bans on advertising, are crucial for controlling national expenditures for treating smoking-related diseases and for averting future economic losses.

DOI10.1080/13696998.2024.2373002
Alternate JournalJ Med Econ
PubMed ID38923934