Litcius/Paper detail

An estimation of the harm of menthol cigarettes in the United States from 1980 to 2018

Thuy T. T. Le, David Méndez

2021Tobacco Control48 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Menthol cigarettes are thought to encourage smoking initiation among youths and young adults and make it more difficult for smokers to quit, thus increasing cigarette harm. However, no study to date has quantified the damage that menthol cigarettes have caused the US population. OBJECTIVE: To estimate the excess smoking prevalence, smoking initiation, and mortality in the US from 1980 through 2018 that can be attributed to menthol cigarettes. METHODS: =0.98) and associated mortality. Then we re-ran the model, assuming that menthol cigarettes were not present in the market over the same period. Finally, we compared both scenarios to quantify the public health harm attributable to menthol over the 1980-2018 period. RESULTS: From 1980 to 2018, we found that menthol cigarettes were responsible for slowing down the decline in smoking prevalence by 2.6 percentage points (13.7% vs 11.1% in 2018). Our results also show that menthol cigarettes were responsible for 10.1 million extra smokers, 3 million life years lost and 378 000 premature deaths during that period. CONCLUSIONS: With millions of excess smoking initiators and thousands of smoking-related deaths due to mentholated cigarettes from 1980 through 2018, our results indicate that these products have had a significant detrimental impact on the public's health and could continue to pose a substantial health risk. Our findings can assist the Food and Drug Administration in evaluating potential regulatory actions for mentholated tobacco products.

Topics & Concepts

MentholHarmMedicineEnvironmental healthSmoking prevalenceNational Health Interview SurveyPublic healthDemographyTobacco controlEstimationPopulationCigarette smokingYoung adultGerontologyPsychologyManagementChemistrySociologyEconomicsNursingOrganic chemistrySocial psychologyInternal medicineSmoking Behavior and CessationCarcinogens and Genotoxicity AssessmentSubstance Abuse Treatment and Outcomes