Long-term impact of smoking cessation on the incidence of coronary heart disease.
- 1 December 1990
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Public Health Association in American Journal of Public Health
- Vol. 80 (12), 1481-1486
- https://doi.org/10.2105/ajph.80.12.1481
Abstract
Using a simulation model of the US male population, we estimated the long-term impact that future smoking cessation programs would have on the distribution and occurrence of coronary heart disease in males ages 35-84. For interventions that reduce the number of smokers by 25 percent in 1990, the number of men free of coronary heart disease is projected to increase by 416,787 (0.7 percent) in 2015, and the age-standardized absolute incidence to decline by 2.3 percent. Incidence rates and absolute incidences are projected to fall in men under age 65, but absolute incidence would rise in men over age 65, in large part because of the increased number of men who were at risk for coronary heart disease because of a reduction in non-coronary smoking-related mortality. These trends were more marked for greater smoking reductions and were generally unaffected in a variety of analyses using alternative assumptions, which considered smoking as a risk factor in the elderly, a lag-time before benefits from smoking cessation were realized and secular declines in smoking prevalence. Subject to the assumptions of our model, we conclude that smoking reductions will markedly reduce coronary heart disease, especially in younger age groups, and that this benefit will be slightly offset by a small increase in absolute incidence in elderly men.This publication has 29 references indexed in Scilit:
- The cost-effectiveness of counseling smokers to quitPublished by American Medical Association (AMA) ,1989
- Trends in cigarette smoking in the United States. Projections to the year 2000JAMA, 1989
- Beneficial Six-Year Outcome of Smoking Cessation in Older Men and Women with Coronary Artery DiseaseNew England Journal of Medicine, 1988
- Coronary heart disease: Epidemiology of smoking and intervention studies of smokingAmerican Heart Journal, 1988
- Coronary heart disease death, nonfatal acute myocardial infarction and other clinical outcomes in the multiple risk factor intervention trialThe American Journal of Cardiology, 1986
- The Risk of Myocardial Infarction after Quitting Smoking in Men under 55 Years of AgeNew England Journal of Medicine, 1985
- Smoking: Health Effects and ControlNew England Journal of Medicine, 1985
- Trends in the Incidence of Myocardial Infarction and in Associated Mortality and Morbidity in a Large Employed Population, 1957–1983New England Journal of Medicine, 1985
- Relationship of blood pressure, serum cholesterol, smoking habit, relative weight and ECG abnormalities to incidence of major coronary events: Final report of the pooling projectJournal of Chronic Diseases, 1978
- Smoking and Carcinoma of the LungBMJ, 1950