Cost of Smoking
Cost of Smoking
In Massachusetts, tobacco-related illnesses kill more people than HIV/AIDS, car crashes, homicide, suicide, and poisoning combined.
People who smoke are more likely to suffer disabling and often painful illnesses that reduce their quality of life—including stroke, several types of cancers, emphysema, and other respiratory illnesses.
The economic cost of tobacco use is also staggering. Each year in Massachusetts, personal health care expenses due to smoking amount to $4.3 billion. Businesses in the Commonwealth also suffer, losing $1.7 billion in lost revenue due to the death of smokers.
For more information on this topic, see “Health and Economic Consequences of Tobacco Use” at www.mass.gov/dph/mtcp.
News and Updates
Children who breathe secondhand smoke get coughs, bronchitis, and pneumonia more often.
©2006 - 2010 Massachusetts Tobacco Cessation and Prevention Program. All rights reserved.








