Health care institutions should not exclude smokers from employment

Acad Med. 2014 Jun;89(6):843-7. doi: 10.1097/ACM.0000000000000247.

Abstract

Some health care institutions, including academic health centers, have adopted policies excluding smokers from employment. Claims advanced on behalf of these policies include financial savings from reduced health costs and absenteeism as well as advantages consonant with their message of healthy living. The authors suggest that the institutional savings from these policies are speculative and unproven. Also, in settings where large medical schools operate, it is likely to be the poor, including members of minority groups, who, under an employee smoker ban, will lose the opportunity to work for an employer that offers health insurance and other benefits. In response to the incentives created by such bans, some will quit smoking, but most will not. Thus, at the community level, employee smoker bans are more likely to be harmful than beneficial.Although private businesses may rightly choose not to hire smokers in the 19 states where such policies are legal, health care institutions, including academic health centers, should consider hiring choices in light of the values they profess. The traditional values of medicine include service to all persons in need, even when illness results from addiction or unsafe behavior. Secular academic communities require a shared dedication to discovery without requiring strict conformity of private behavior or belief. The authors conclude that for health care institutions, policies of hiring smokers and helping them to quit are both prudent and expressive of the norms of medical care, such as inclusion, compassion, and fellowship, that academic health professionals seek to honor.

MeSH terms

  • Health Care Costs
  • Health Facility Administration* / economics
  • Health Facility Administration* / ethics
  • Health Facility Administration* / standards
  • Humans
  • Occupational Health
  • Organizational Policy*
  • Personnel Selection* / economics
  • Personnel Selection* / ethics
  • Personnel Selection* / standards
  • Smoking Cessation
  • Smoking* / economics
  • Social Discrimination*
  • Social Support
  • United States