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  Vol. 252 No. 20, November 23, 1984 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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Tobacco Addiction and Tobacco Mortality

Implications for Death Certification

William Pollin, MD; R. T. Ravenholt, MD

JAMA. 1984;252(20):2849-2854.


Abstract

Addictive disorders now cause more than one fourth of all deaths in the United States—more than a half million deaths in 1982. But this essential fact is obscured in the nation's vital records and statistics by the general practice of certifying addictive disease deaths to their innumerable anatomic manifestations. However, this situation need not continue indefinitely. Physicians have both an opportunity and a responsibility to state their knowledge of the underlying causes of deaths occurring under their care, and the diagnostic category "Tobacco Use Disorder/Tobacco Dependence," listed in the ninth revision of the International Classification of Diseases is available for their use. By routinely ascertaining the lifetime smoking experience of each patient and stating on each death certificate the role of tobacco, physicians can contribute substantially to improvement of vital statistics, epidemiology, and public health.

(JAMA 1984;252:2849-2854)



Author Affiliations

From the National Institute on Drug Abuse, Rockville, Md. Dr Ravenholt is now with World Health Surveys, Inc, Bethesda, Md.


Footnotes

Presented to the Forum on Alcohol and Drug Problems at the annual meeting of the American Public Health Association, Dallas, Nov 15, 1983.

Reprint requests to Director, World Health Surveys, Inc, 4960 Sentinel Dr, Bethesda, MD 20816 (Dr Ravenholt).



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THIS ARTICLE HAS BEEN CITED BY OTHER ARTICLES

Physicians, Vital Statistics, and Disease Reporting
Goodman and Berkelman
JAMA 1987;258:379-381.
ABSTRACT  

Lifetime Tobacco Use
RAVENHOLT
ANN INTERN MED 1986;105:472-473.
ABSTRACT  





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