U.S. federal and state policies are at a "tipping point" in terms of winning the war against smoking, according to an American Lung Association report. "Over
 the next year, key decisions will be made by the federal government and
 the states about whether or not they will help save lives, prevent 
disease and reduce health costs," Paul Billings, senior vice president 
of advocacy and education at the American Lung Association, said in an 
association news release.
The association believes the federal 
government has missed important opportunities to improve Americans' 
access to medications and counseling to help them quit smoking. The 
record among states is mixed, but too few provide coverage to help 
people kick the habit, the report said.
"We know that the vast 
majority of smokers want to quit, but the complex web of state and 
federal coverage for effective quit-smoking programs and treatments 
prevents too many from getting the help they need," Billings said. 
"States and the federal government can reduce the enormous health burden
 of tobacco use by providing access to these proven interventions."
Here are some key findings from the association's 2012 annual report:
In
 terms of Medicaid coverage, only two states (Indiana and Massachusetts)
 provide comprehensive coverage to help people quit smoking, and two 
states (Alabama and Georgia) provide no coverage. Four states (Colorado,
 Kansas, North Dakota and South Dakota) provided new counseling benefits
 for pregnant women in 2012. Connecticut and Tennessee announced new 
benefits for everyone in 2012 that are close to comprehensive.
In 
terms of state-employee health plan coverage, only four states 
(Illinois, New Mexico, North Dakota and Rhode Island) provide 
comprehensive coverage. All other states provide some type of coverage. 
In 2012, Florida, Georgia, Nebraska and New Jersey added new 
smoking-cessation benefits for state employees.
Even though 
telephone quitlines are an important part of quit-smoking efforts, most 
states do not provide adequate funding for their quitlines. Only two 
states (Maine and South Dakota) currently fund quitlines at or above the
 recommended amount, the report said, noting this is a critical lost 
opportunity.
On Nov. 26, the U.S. Department of Health and Human 
Services published a proposed rule that requires tobacco cessation as an
 essential health benefit under the Affordable Care Act. But the 
department missed a crucial opportunity by not defining what insurers 
must include as part of a tobacco-cessation benefit.
States, 
however, can use this opportunity to help smokers quit by including 
comprehensive quit-smoking benefits as they implement the state health 
insurance exchanges and Medicaid expansions required by the Affordable 
Care Act, the report said.
"Giving all smokers access to a 
comprehensive cessation benefits is not only the right thing to do, it's
 the smart thing to do," Billings said. "The bottom line is that 
quitting smoking saves lives and saves money."
Tobacco use -- the 
leading cause of preventable death in the United States -- costs the 
country's economy $193 billion a year, according to the report. One 
recent study showed that providing smokers with help to quit has a 
three-to-one return on investment, meaning $3 is saved for every for $1 
spent.
Not all states understand this, however. For example, 
"Maine's governor cut Medicaid coverage of tobacco-cessation medications
 as part of a short-sighted cost-cutting strategy," Billings said.

 
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