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The 2007 drop gave CDC officials hope that U.S. smoking was plummeting again. "Now that appears to be a statistical aberration," McKenna said.
The new survey's results come from in-person interviews of nearly 22,000 U.S. adults.
The study was released Thursday, published in the CDC publication, Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report.
Also on Thursday, the CDC released state-by-state results on smoking from a different survey, conducted by telephone, of more than 400,000 adults. West Virginia and Indiana had the highest smoking rates, at about 26 percent, but four other states -- Kentucky, Missouri, Oklahoma and Tennessee -- had rates about as high.
Utah had, by far, the lowest smoking rate, with only about 9 percent of Utah residents describing themselves as current smokers.
Many of the states that have the lowest smoking rates are those that have been the most aggressive about indoor smoking laws and about state taxes that drive up the cost of cigarettes, said Dr. Thomas Frieden, the CDC's director.
Health officials are optimistic that more and more smokers will be discouraged from lighting up by escalating cigarette taxes, including a 62-cent federal tax that took effect in April. That may cause smoking to go down when the 2009 smoking data comes in, some advocates said.
Perhaps the recession will have an impact, too.
"In general, when people have less money, they smoke less," Frieden said. "Time will tell."
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On the Net:
CDC report: http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/
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