For some of the key victories and milestones in the American Lung Association's efforts to fight tobacco use, see our Tobacco Control Timeline
- A 2021 study found that menthol cigarettes were responsible for 1.5 million new smokers, 157,000 smoking-related premature deaths and 1.5 million life years lost among African Americans from 1980 to 2018.
- A Federal Trade Commission report showed cigarette sales increased for the first time in 20 years in 2020.
- CDC has definitively linked smoking to more severe illness from COVID-19.
- While overall cigarette use declined by 26% from 2009 to 2019, 91% of that decline was due to non-menthol cigarettes.
- Among current youth e-cigarette users in 2021, flavored e-cigarette use was 85.8% among high school students and 79.2% among middle school students.
- From 2019 to 2021, disposable e-cigarette use skyrocketed by more than 23 times among high school e-cigarette users (from 2.4% to 55.8%) and more than 14 times among middle school e-cigarette users (from 3% to 43.8%).
- More than 23.6% of high school students in the U.S. use at least one tobacco product, including e-cigarettes, according to the 2020 National Youth Tobacco Survey.
- 6.7% of middle school students use at least one tobacco product, including e-cigarettes, according to the 2020 National Youth Tobacco Survey.
- Smoking is the number one preventable cause of death in the U.S., killing over 480,000 people per year.
- Secondhand smoke causes more than 41,000 deaths in the U.S. each year.
- 28 states and Washington D.C. have passed laws making virtually all public places and workplaces, including restaurants and bars smokefree.
- The District of Columbia has the highest cigarette tax in the country at $4.50 per pack.
- Missouri has the lowest cigarette tax in the country at 17 cents per pack.
- The average cigarette taxes of all states plus the District of Columbia are $1.91 per pack.
- Connecticut is the only state to provide no state funding at all for its tobacco prevention programs.
- Two states – Alaska and Oregon– are funding their tobacco control programs at or close to CDC-recommended levels (in Fiscal Year 2022).
- Maryland was the only states to increase its cigarette taxes by significant amounts in 2021.
- No state approved a comprehensive smokefree workplace law in 2021.
- 15 states – California, Colorado, Connecticut, Illinois, Kansas, Kentucky, Maine, Massachusetts, Missouri, Ohio, Oregon, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Vermont and Virginia – offer a comprehensive cessation benefit to tobacco users on Medicaid.
- Each of the 50 states and the District of Columbia provide tobacco quitlines, a phone number for quit smoking phone counseling. The median amount states invest in quitlines is $2.41 per smoker in each state.
- Nationwide, the Medicaid program spends more than $39.6 billion in healthcare costs for smoking-related diseases each year – more than 15.2% of total Medicaid spending.
- 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.
- 40 states and the District of Columbia spend less than half of what the CDC recommends on their state tobacco prevention programs.
- States spend less than three cents of every dollar of the over $27 billion they get from tobacco settlement payments and tobacco taxes to reduce tobacco use in fiscal year 2022.
- Each day, close to 1,100 kids under 18 try their first cigarette and more than 100 kids become new, regular smokers.
- Each day, more than 1,000 kids try their first cigar. On average, more than 40 kids try their first cigar every hour in the United States – equaling about 373,000 every year.
- Smoking costs the U.S. economy over $332 billion in direct health care costs and lost productivity every year.
- The five largest cigarette companies spent close to $21.5 million dollars per day marketing their products in 2020.
- Secondhand smoke costs the U.S. economy $5.6 billion per year due to lost productivity.
- Smoking rates are over twice as high for Medicaid recipients (26.2%) compared to those with private insurance (11.5%).
- A 2013 study of California's tobacco prevention program shows that the state saved $55 in healthcare costs for every $1 invested from 1989 to 2008.
- A 2017 study found that states which expanded Medicaid had a 36% increase in the number of tobacco cessation medication prescriptions relative to the states that did not expand Medicaid. This means more quit attempts with proven cessation treatments are being made.
- A 2019 study found patients in Medicaid expansion states who ordered a cessation medication had a 65% higher chance of quitting than those in non-expansion states.
- In 2020, Missouri, Nebraska and Oklahoma implemented Medicaid expansion, providing more smokers with access to tobacco cessation treatments.
- Uninsured Americans smoke at a rate more than two times higher (22.8%) than people with private insurance (11.5%).
- An estimated one-third of Americans living in public housing smoke.
- The smoking rate among adults with moderate to severe psychological distress is 79% higher than among those with none to mild.
- Indigenous Peoples (American Indians/Alaska Natives) have the highest commercial tobacco smoking rates among any racial/ethnic group.
- Massachusetts is the only state that prohibits the sale of all flavored tobacco products, including menthol cigarettes.
Page last updated: April 17, 2024