Do penalties for obese, smokers make sense?

FILE - In this Wednesday, Feb. 14, 2007 file photo, a man smokes in Omaha, Neb. Annual health care costs are roughly $96 billion for smokers and $147 billion for the obese, the government says. These costs accompany sometimes heroic attempts to prolong their lives, including surgery, chemotherapy and other measures. But despite these rescue attempts, smokers tend to die 10 years earlier on average, and the obese die five to 12 years prematurely, according to various researchers' estimates. (AP Photo/Nati Harnik, File) Show caption
FILE - In this Wednesday, Feb. 14, 2007 file photo, a man smokes in Omaha, Neb. Annual health care costs are roughly $96 billion for smokers and $147 billion for the obese, the government says. These costs accompany sometimes heroic attempts to prolong their lives, including surgery, chemotherapy and other measures. But despite these rescue attempts, smokers tend to die 10 years earlier on average, and the obese die five to 12 years prematurely, according to various researchers' estimates. (AP Photo/Nati Harnik, File)

Faced with the high cost of caring for smokers and overeaters, experts say society must grapple with a blunt question: Instead of trying to penalize them and change their ways, why not just let these health sinners die?

Annual health care costs are roughly $96 billion for smokers and $147 billion for the obese, the government says. These costs accompany sometimes heroic attempts to prolong lives, including surgery, chemotherapy and other measures.

But despite these rescue attempts, smokers tend to die 10 years earlier on average, and the obese die five to 12 years prematurely, according to various researchers’ estimates.

And attempts to curb smoking and unhealthy eating frequently lead to backlash: Witness the current legal tussle over New York City’s first-of-its-kind limits on the size of sugary beverages and the vicious fight last year in California over a ballot proposal to add a $1-per-pack cigarette tax, which was ultimately defeated.

“This is my life. I should be able to do what I want,” said Sebastian Lopez, a college student from Queens, speaking last September when the New York City Board of Health approved the soda size rules.

Critics also contend that tobacco- and calorie-control measures place a disproportionately heavy burden on poor people. That’s because they:

  • Smoke more than the rich, and have higher obesity rates.
  • Have less money so sales taxes hit them harder. One study last year found poor, nicotine-dependent smokers in New York — a state with very high cigarette taxes — spent as much as a quarter of their entire income on smokes.
  • Are less likely to have a car to shop elsewhere if the corner bodega or convenience store stops stocking their vices.

Critics call these approaches unfair, and believe they have only a marginal effect.

“Ultimately these things are weak tea,” said Dr. Scott Gottlieb, a physician and fellow at the right-of-center think tank, the American Enterprise Institute.

Gottlieb’s view is debatable. There are plenty of public health researchers who can show smoking control measures have brought down smoking rates and who will argue that smoking taxes are not regressive so long as money is earmarked for programs that help poor people quit smoking.

And debate they will. There always seems to be a fight whenever this kind of public health legislation comes up. And it’s a fight that can go in all sorts of directions. For example, some studies even suggest that because smokers and obese people die sooner, they may actually cost society less than healthy people who live much longer and develop chronic conditions like Alzheimer’s disease.

So let’s return to the original question: Why provoke a backlash? If 1 in 5 U.S. adults smoke, and 1 in 3 are obese, why not just get off their backs and let them go on with their (probably shortened) lives?

Because it’s not just about them, say some health economists, bioethicists and public health researchers.

“Your freedom is likely to be someone else’s harm,” said Daniel Callahan, senior research scholar at a bioethics think-tank, the Hastings Center.

Smoking has the most obvious impact. Studies have increasingly shown harm to nonsmokers who are unlucky enough to work or live around heavy smokers. And several studies have shown heart attacks and asthma attack rates fell in counties or cities that adopted big smoking bans.

“When you ban smoking in public places, you’re protecting everyone’s health, including and especially the nonsmoker,” said S. Jay Olshansky, a professor at the University of Illinois-Chicago’s School of Public Health.

From an economist’s perspective, there would be less reason to grouse about unhealthy behaviors by smokers, obese people, motorcycle riders who eschew helmets and other health sinners if they agreed to pay the financial price for their choices.

That’s the rationale for a provision in the Affordable Care Act — “Obamacare” to its detractors — that starting next year allows health insurers to charge smokers buying individual policies up to 50 percent higher premiums.

A 60-year-old could wind up paying nearly $5,100 on top of premiums.

The new law doesn’t allow insurers to charge more for people who are overweight, however. It’s tricky to play the insurance game with overweight people, because science is still sorting things out.

While obesity is clearly linked with serious health problems and early death, the evidence is not as clear about people who are just overweight.

That said, public health officials shouldn’t shy away from tough anti-obesity efforts, said Callahan, the bioethicist. Callahan caused a public stir this week with a paper that called for a more aggressive public health campaign that tries to shame and stigmatize overeaters the way past public health campaigns have shamed and stigmatized smokers.

National obesity rates are essentially static, and public health campaigns that gently try to educate people about the benefits of exercise and healthy eating just aren’t working, Callahan argued. We need to get obese people to change their behavior. If they are angry or hurt by it, so be it, he said.

“Emotions are what really count in this world,” he said.


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Comments (6)


1) Comment by zealer99 - 27/01/2013

It is always easy to make excuses and point fingers in other directions but the fact of the matter is that we (collectively) are fat and lazy and expect other people to pick up the risk for our risky behavior. Medical insurance rates of whatever nature should be adjusted upward for risky behaviors such as smoking, obesity, drug abuse, and hazardous driving habits (traffic tickets). It is not a matter of the government controlling your behavior, it is a matter of paying for the additional risk that the behavior brings the to the other people who are in the risk pool.

2) Comment by 8point6 - 27/01/2013

Just looking around BR, it seems that Louisiana should lead the nation with obese poor people. Good point, Whatnow.

3) Comment by Whatnow - 27/01/2013

If you can't tell a woman what to do with her body concerning an abortion of the unborn, you shouldn't be able to tell anyone else what to do with with their body. Right? Government control, control and more control. The government needs to get out of the control business.

4) Comment by speakthetruth - 27/01/2013

This is what happens as government gets more involved in our lives. With obamacare being forced on us there will be a lot of discussions on who should live and who should die. There will be controls on what we eat, what we drink, who should pay for it, what companies are good and which ones are bad. People will say its not fair, but the government is not known for listening to the people. Has anyone talked to a Dr. lately and asked their opinion of obamacare. I have talked to several and its not good. @louisianared, I'm sure alcohol is on the hit list, and when that happens the LSU fans and La rednecks will be up in arms ready to fight. I can see their motto now, " don't be messin with my beer".

5) Comment by On_The_Fence - 27/01/2013

Say I go cliff-diving every day and I hit the bottom once every so often but usually I don't bother anyone and hey, it's my life. Still when I do hit bottom, someone has to rescue me. I have nothing much other than my swimsuit. No insurance so someone has to provide my healthcare for that particular miss. I'm told repeatedly that considering my state of equilibrium, cliff-diving is a bad choice for me. Yes, clearly, but it's my choice. Why am I not held accountable? Who ultimately is paying for my life choices?

6) Comment by louisisanared - 27/01/2013

What about those who drink alcohol everyday. Most diseases are caused or worsened by alcohol. The definition of obese is calculated on your body mass index and you only have to be a few pounds overweight to fall into the category. I agree we have a problem, but let us not start picking on just the smokers and eaters. We can start picking on professions, too. Start penalizing police officers, chemical plant workers, etc.