State of Tobacco Control Facts
- Smoking is the number one preventable cause of death in the U.S., killing over 393,000 people each year.
- Secondhand smoke kills almost 50,000 people each year.
- 27 states have passed laws prohibiting smoking in almost all public places and workplaces, including restaurants and bars.
- New York has the highest cigarette tax in the country at $4.35 per pack.
- Missouri has the lowest cigarette tax in the country at 17 cents per pack.
- Alaska is the only state that funds its tobacco control programs at or above the CDC-recommended level (in Fiscal Year 2012).
- Only 2 states approved increases in their cigarette taxes in 2011 and neither increase was significant enough to protect public health.
- No states passed a comprehensive smokefree workplace in 2011. Nevada actually weakened its law.
- 6 states – Indiana, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Nevada, North Carolina and Pennsylvania – offer comprehensive cessation benefits to tobacco users on Medicaid.
- 2 states – Alabama and Georgia – offer virtually no help with quitting to most tobacco users on Medicaid.
- In 2009, the American Lung Association played a key role in the passage of the Family Smoking Prevention and Tobacco Control Act, which gives the U.S. Food and Drug Administration authority over tobacco products.
- The American Lung Association played a key role in airplanes becoming smokefree in the 1990s.
- 43 states and the District of Columbia spend less than half of what the CDC recommends on their state tobacco control programs.
- Each day, almost 3,900 kids under 18 try their first cigarette and more than 1,000 kids become new, regular smokers.
- Smoking costs the U.S. economy $193 billion dollars each year, $96 billion in direct health care costs and $97 billion in lost productivity.
- The five largest cigarette companies spent over $27 million dollars a day marketing their products in 2008.
- The American Lung Association has been fighting smoking and tobacco use since the 1950s.
- Smoking rates for Medicaid recipients are over 60 percent higher than the general population.
- Only 4 states – Maine, North Dakota, South Dakota and Wyoming – fund their quitlines at CDC-recommended levels.
- A recent study of Washington state’s tobacco prevention program shows that the state saved $5 for every $1 invested from 2000-2009.
- A recent study of Massachusetts’ comprehensive Medicaid quit smoking benefit found that it saved $3 for every $1 spent in just over a year.


