Wednesday, January 6, 2016
Only 15% of CT Medicaid smokers are getting medications to help quit
An article in
this month’s Health Affairs estimates that only 15% of CT’s 102,000
Medicaid adults who smoke are getting medications to help them quit. While this
is better than the 10% US average, there is a lot of room to improve. 31% of
adults in our state’s Medicaid program smoke, about twice the rate for all CT adults. Smoking is
the leading preventable cause of disease and the Surgeon General estimates that
15% of Medicaid spending results from smoking. The Affordable Care Act requires
all Medicaid programs to offer smoking cessation treatment, but the extent and
effectiveness of those programs vary considerably. The study estimates that 10%
of all US Medicaid smokers are getting cessation medications but that rate
varies from 27% in Minnesota to 2% in Rhode Island. The article outlines some
differences between more and less effective states.