Cigarette Smoking Among
Adults --- United States, 2003
One of the national health
objectives for 2010 is to reduce the prevalence of cigarette
smoking among adults to 12% (objective 27-1a) (1). To assess
progress toward this objective, CDC analyzed self-reported
data from the 2003 National Health Interview Survey (NHIS).
The results of that analysis indicated that, in 2003,
approximately 21.6% of U.S. adults were current smokers.
Although this prevalence is lower than the 22.5% prevalence
among U.S. adults in 2002 and significantly lower than the
22.8% prevalence in 2001, the rate of decline is not
sufficient to meet the national health objective for 2010
(2). Comprehensive, sustained interventions that reduce the
rate of smoking initiation and increase the rate of
cessation are needed to further the decline in cigarette
smoking among adults (3).
Questions on
smoking in the 2003 NHIS were included in the adult core
questionnaire, which was administered by in-person interview
to a nationally representative sample of 30,852 persons aged
>18 years in the civilian, noninstitutionalized U.S.
population; survey response rate for adults was 74.2%.
Respondents were asked, "Have you smoked at least 100
cigarettes in your entire life?" and "Do you now smoke
cigarettes every day, some days, or not at all?" Ever
smokers were defined as those who reported smoking >100
cigarettes during their lifetimes. Current smokers were
defined as those who reported smoking >100 cigarettes during
their lifetimes and currently smoking every day or some
days. Former smokers were defined as ever smokers who no
longer smoked. Poverty-level status was calculated on the
basis of U.S. Census Bureau 2002 poverty thresholds. Data
were adjusted for nonrespondents and weighted to provide
national estimates of cigarette smoking prevalence; 95%
confidence intervals (CIs) were calculated to account for
the multistage probability sample design.
In 2003, an
estimated 21.6% (45.4 million) of U.S. adults were current
smokers; of these, 81.0% (36.8 million) smoked every day,
and 19.0% (8.6 million) smoked some days. Among those who
currently smoked every day, 41.1% (15.1 million) reported
they had stopped smoking for at least 1 day during the
preceding 12 months because they were trying to quit. Among
the estimated 43.4% (91.5 million) of persons who had ever
smoked, 50.3% (45.9 million) were former smokers.
Prevalence of
current cigarette smoking varied substantially across
populations and subpopulations (Table). More men (24.1%)
than women (19.2%) reported current smoking. Among
racial/ethnic populations, Asians (11.7%) and Hispanics
(16.4%) had the lowest prevalence, and American
Indians/Alaska Natives had the highest prevalence (39.7%).
By education level, smoking prevalence was highest among
adults who had earned a General Educational Development
diploma (44.4%) and lowest among those with graduate degrees
(7.5%). Among age groups, persons aged >65 years had the
lowest prevalence of cigarette smoking (9.1%), and persons
aged 25--44 years had the highest prevalence (25.6%).
Current smoking prevalence was higher among adults living
below the poverty level (30.5%) than among those at or above
the poverty level (21.7%).
Persons in
certain subpopulations had cigarette smoking prevalence
rates below the 2010 health objective target of 12%. These
subpopulations included women with undergraduate (11.0%) or
graduate degrees (6.7%), men with graduate degrees (8.1%),
Hispanic women (10.3%), Asian women (6.5%), and men and
women aged >65 years (10.1% and 8.3%, respectively) (Table).
During
1983--2003, a sustained decline in cigarette smoking
occurred in all age groups except persons aged 18--24 years
(Figure). In this group, prevalence increased during
1993--2002, before declining significantly from 28.5% in
2002 to 23.9% in 2003, the lowest reported prevalence for
persons aged 18--24 years since 1991 (4).
Reported by:
A Trosclair, MS, R Caraballo, PhD, A Malarcher, MD, C
Husten, MD, T Pechacek, PhD, Office on Smoking and Health,
National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health
Promotion, CDC.
Editorial Note:
The findings in this report indicate that cigarette smoking
continues to decline among adults in the United States. In
2003, for the first time since NHIS began collecting smoking
data in 1965, the prevalence of cigarette smoking among
women declined below 20%, to 19.2%. For the second
consecutive year, more than half of U.S. adults who ever
smoked reported they were no longer smokers. In addition,
cigarette smoking among persons aged 18--24 years declined
to the lowest level since 1991. The increase in smoking
prevalence among young adults during 1991--2002 was similar
to an increase in smoking among youths in 8th, 10th, and
12th grades during the early 1990s (5). Factors associated
with the increase in smoking among adolescents (e.g.,
increased tobacco industry marketing to youths) might have
had a similar influence on smoking prevalence among young
adults (6). A cohort effect might also have contributed to
the increase in smoking prevalence among young adults, as
youths with high rates of smoking during the early 1990s
entered the young adult age group during 1992--2002 (5--7).
Although
tobacco use usually begins during adolescence, initiation
also can occur during young adulthood (6,7). Preventing
smoking initiation and tobacco use among youths and young
adults is critical to reducing tobacco use in the United
States. Young adults, who constitute the youngest legal
market for the tobacco industry in the United States, and
adolescents continue to be the target of intensive tobacco
industry marketing efforts, including sponsorship of
age-specific promotions and other marketing strategies that
appeal to persons in these age groups (7,8).
Efforts to
reduce cigarette smoking prevalence among all adults include
increasing the retail price of tobacco products and
implementing complete smoking bans in all worksites,
campuses, sports arenas, concert venues, bars, restaurants,
and nightclubs. Strategies for reducing cigarette smoking
prevalence among young adults include 1) providing effective
smoking-cessation interventions and quitlines tailored to
youths and young adults in school, work, and community
settings; 2) conducting countermarketing campaigns designed
to help young persons reject messages promoting cigarette
use, reduce access by minors to tobacco products, and
increase access to school programs for preventing tobacco
use; and 3) monitoring smoking trends among youths and young
adults (6--10). Ongoing surveillance of smoking patterns
among young adults and evaluation of tobacco-control
programs can identify those interventions that are most
effective for this age group.
The findings
in this report are subject to at least four limitations.
First, the wording of questions about cigarette smoking and
NHIS data collection procedures have changed since 1993.
Before 1993, current smokers were defined as those who had
smoked at least 100 cigarettes and currently smoked.
Starting in 1993, current smokers were defined as those who
had smoked at least 100 cigarettes and currently smoked
either every day or some days. Therefore, any comparison of
data collected before 1993 with data collected since 1993
should be interpreted with caution. Second, many young
adults view themselves as "social smokers" and might not
identify themselves as smokers even on "some days" when
completing the NHIS questionnaire, leading to underestimates
of current smoking. Third, the NHIS questionnaire is
administered only in English and Spanish, which might lead
to imprecise estimates of smoking prevalence among other
racial/ethnic populations who are unable to respond to the
survey. Finally, because NHIS sample sizes for some
subpopulations are minimal (e.g., Asians and American
Indians/Alaska Natives), estimates derived from 1 year of
data are less precise for these groups.
Effective
interventions for tobacco-use prevention and cessation
should be implemented in the United States among persons of
all ages to accelerate the decline in smoking prevalence
among adults and decrease the public health burden of
tobacco-related diseases (3,6--10). In addition, tailored
interventions for populations and subpopulations at high
risk are needed to reduce disparities in cigarette smoking
by age, race/ethnicity, and education level.
References
1- US Department of Health and Human Services. Healthy
people 2010: understanding and improving health. 2nd ed.
Washington, DC: US Department of Health and Human Services;
2000. Available at
http://www.healthypeople.gov.
2-
CDC. Cigarette smoking among adults -- United States,
2002. MMWR 2004;53:427--31.
3- Task Force on Community Preventive Services. The guide to
community preventive services: tobacco use prevention and
control. Am J Prev Med 2001;20(2 Suppl 1):1--87.
4-
CDC. Cigarette smoking among adults -- United States,
1991. MMWR 1993;42:230--3.
5- Johnston LD, O'Malley PM, Bachman JG, Schulenberg JE.
Monitoring the future: national survey results on drug use,
1975--2003. Volume I: secondary school students. Bethesda,
MD: National Institutes of Health, National Institute on
Drug Abuse; 2004. DHHS publication no. (NIH) 04-5507.
6- Lantz PM. Smoking on the rise among young adults:
implications for research and policy. Tob Control
2003;12(Suppl 1);i60--i70.
7- Backinger CL, Fagan P, Matthews E, Grana R. Adolescent
and young adult tobacco prevention and cessation: current
status and future directions. Tob Control 2003;12(Suppl
4):iv46--iv53.
8- Ling PM, Glantz SA. Why and how the tobacco industry
sells cigarettes to young adults: evidence from industry
documents. Am J Public Health 2002;92:908--16.
9- Orleans CT, Arkin EB, Backinger CL, et al. Youth tobacco
cessation collaborative and national blueprint for action.
Am J Health Behavior 2003;27(Suppl 2):S103--S119.
10- Chaloupka FJ, Cummings KM, Morley CP, Horan JK. Tax,
price, and cigarette smoking: evidence from the tobacco
documents and implications for tobacco company marketing
strategies. Tob Control 2002;11(Suppl 1):i62--i72.
* Additional information is available at
http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/mm5420a3.htm
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Date last reviewed: 5/26/2005
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