Navigation, Contact Info, and Legend for the OSH Website
• View By Topic
• Quick Links
• About this Office
Contact Info
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion
Office on Smoking and Health
Tel: 1-800-CDC-INFO
(1-800-232-4636)
TTY: 1-888-232-6348
E-mail: tobaccoinfo@cdc.gov
Legend
= Link to a PDF document
(Adobe Acrobat™ Reader needs to be installed on your computer in order to read PDF documents.)
Download the Reader
= Link to nonfederal Web site
Disclaimer on nonfederal Web sites
Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Reports (MMWRs)
State-Specific Prevalence of Cigarette Smoking and Quitting
Among Adults
— United States, 2004
November 11, 2005 / Vol. 54 / No. 44
MMWR Highlights
- For the second year in a row, Utah was the only state to reach the
Healthy People 2010 objective of reducing smoking prevalence to
12% or less. California reached the objective among the female population.
- Adult current smoking prevalence varied considerably across 49 states,
the District of Columbia (DC), Puerto Rico, and the U.S. Virgin Islands
(USVI). For the states and the District of Columbia, prevalence ranged
from 10.5% (Utah) to 27.6% (Kentucky).
- Kentucky (27.6%), West Virginia (26.9%), Oklahoma
(26.1%) and Tennessee (26.1%) had the highest prevalence
of current smokers. Smoking prevalence was lowest in Utah (10.5%),
California (14.8%), and Idaho (17.5%).
- Smoking prevalence was 9.5% in the U.S. Virgin Islands and
12.7% in Puerto Rico.
- More than half of states (34) have achieved percentages of ever
smokers who have quit of 50% or greater.
- Including 49 states, Washington D.C., Puerto Rico, and U.S. Virgin
Islands, 36 states/areas had percentages of ever smokers who have quit
at or above 50%.
- Four states had percentages of ever smokers who have quit of 60
percent or higher including: Connecticut (62.5%), California
(62.0%), Vermont (60.5%), and Utah (60.1%).
- The five states with the lowest percentages of ever smokers who
have quit were Kentucky (42.5%), Mississippi (44.0%),
Alabama (45.6%), and Louisiana and Tennessee (45.9%).
- The prevalence of never smoking was highest in Utah (73.7%)
and California (61.1%) and lowest in Maine (47.7%) and
West Virginia (48.0%).
- In the majority of states, most adults have never been smokers and
among those who have ever smoked, the majority have quit.
- However, the rate of decline is not rapid enough for most states
to reach the Healthy People 2010 national health objective of reducing adult smoking
prevalence to 12% or less.
Page last reviewed 02/28/2007
Page last modified 02/28/2007