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Australians with mental illness who smoke

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2018

S. Lawn*
Affiliation:
Southern Mental Health, 820 Marion Road, Marion 5043, South Australia
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Abstract

Type
Columns
Copyright
Copyright © 2001 The Royal College of Psychiatrists 

This Australian comparison to the editorial by McCreadie & Kelly (Reference McCreadie and Kelly2000) demonstrates that the financial costs for Australian smokers with a mental illness, as for British subjects, are substantial.

As part of a detailed qualitative study of a public mental health service in Adelaide, South Australia, encompassing qualitative interviews with 24 community clients and a participant observation of the community and in-patient settings in which they have contact, I found that these smokers experience significant financial and social disadvantage as a consequence of their smoking. Within their community homes and hostels, and in-patient environments, there exists a significant reinforcing smoking culture in which cigarettes provide a central currency for many aspects of people's lives. Smoking provides them with a source of control and autonomy in the face of overwhelming powerlessness, fear of illness relapse, and stigma. However, a vicious cycle of loss, debt and need serves to compound the predicaments of these smokers. Some basic data are presented in Table 1.

Table 1 Characteristics of participants (n=24)

Variable Mean Median Range
Age 43 42 25-63
Years smoked 27 24 4-50
Current cigarette consumption 40 35 20-75
Age at smoking onset 15 14 10-24
Quit attempts Multiple Multiple 0 to Multiple

In Australia, the current average cost of one of the cheaper brands of cigarettes is $10.40 for a packet of 40 (from a survey of two supermarkets and two suburban convenience stores; recommended retail prices for the equivalent brands, as quoted by Phillip Morris and British American Tobacco Australia Ltd, were approximately $2 more). Of this, the amount returned to the government in excise is $7.79 (Australian Taxation Office, 2000). Therefore, a person with a mental illness who smokes 40 cigarettes per day gives to the government $54.53 per week in the form of tax, or $2835.56 per year. All participants in this study receive a government pension and most live alone in public rental accommodation. The current rate of the Disability Support Pension is $197.05 per week (Centrelink, 2000). Hence, such a person who smokes 40 cigarettes per day returns approximately 27.7% of their benefit to the Australian treasury.

Following the introduction of population-wide anti-smoking measures, there has been an overall reduction in the prevalence of smoking to about 25% of the Australian population. However, this is not the case for people with a mental illness. According to a National Mental Health Strategy survey (Reference Jablensky, McGrath and HerrmanJablensky et al, 1999), 73.3% of people with a psychotic illness smoke. With a prevalence of psychosis at 4.7 per 1000 population aged 18-64 years (Reference Jablensky, McGrath and HerrmanJablensky et al, 1999), there are probably at least 53 416 people with psychosis in Australia (Australian Bureau of Statistics, 2000a , b ). If 73.3% smoke, and smoke on average 40 cigarettes per day, the contribution to the treasury is approximately $111 million per year. People with a mental illness are, through their smoking habit, contributing substantially to the cost of their own care.

For people with a mental illness the financial and personal consequences of their dependence on smoking impact on all aspects of their quality of life, and their ability to manage their mental illness. We are in danger of further polarising this population, already stigmatised by their mental illness, if the perpetuation of the poverty cycle in which they find themselves is not addressed.

References

Australian Bureau of Statistics (2000a) Population by Age and Sex for Australian States and Territories. Ref. 3201.0. Adelaide: ABS.Google Scholar
Australian Bureau of Statistics (2000b) Australian Demographic Statistics. Ref. 3101.0. Adelaide: ABS.Google Scholar
Australian Taxation Office (2000) August 2000 – Excise Rate Schedule. Canberra: Australian Government Publishing Service.Google Scholar
Centrelink (2000) A Guide to Commonwealth Government Payments: 20 September to 31 December, 2000. Canberra: Australian Government Publishing Service.Google Scholar
Jablensky, A., McGrath, J., Herrman, H., et al (1999) People Living with Psychotic Illness: An Australian Study 1997–98. An Overview, National Survey of Mental Health and Wellbeing, Bulletin I. Canberra: Commonwealth Department of Health and Aged Care/National Mental Health Strategy.Google Scholar
McCreadie, R. G. & Kelly, C. (2000) Patients with schizophrenia who smoke. Private disaster, public resource. British Journal of Psychiatry, 176, 109.Google Scholar
Figure 0

Table 1 Characteristics of participants (n=24)

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