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. 2014 Nov;25(4):1922-40.
doi: 10.1353/hpu.2014.0171.

Making the case for medicaid funding of smoking cessation treatment programs: an application to state-level health care savings

Making the case for medicaid funding of smoking cessation treatment programs: an application to state-level health care savings

Debra Moehle McCallum et al. J Health Care Poor Underserved. 2014 Nov.

Abstract

Background: In spite of cost-saving tobacco-dependence treatments, many state Medicaid programs offer only limited coverage for these treatments. This report builds a case for state-level financial benefits from funding smoking cessation treatment for Medicaid-eligible populations.

Methods: Applying published cost estimates to state-specific data, we assessed potential health care savings from tobacco-dependence treatments for pregnant women, mothers exposing young children to secondhand smoke, and other adult Medicaid beneficiaries.

Results: Across all three populations there was evidence for short-term positive returns on investment. Including counseling and nicotine replacement therapy, estimated net savings were $157,000 annually for pregnant women and their newborns, $33,000 annually within four years for children exposed to smoke at home, and $5 million annually within two years for the general adult Medicaid population in Alabama.

Conclusions: Findings suggest that making tobacco-dependence treatment freely available to low-income smokers can produce net savings for state governments within a short period of time.

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