This article is from the archives of the UB Reporter.
News

Waterpipe smoking becoming ‘epidemic’
among young people, UB study concludes

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    Listen to a podcast with Elie Akl on the effects of waterpipe smoking on lung function.

By ELLEN GOLDBAUM
Published: April 28, 2011

Students in schools and universities in the U.S. and around the world are using waterpipes to smoke tobacco at “alarmingly high” rates, according to a study published this month by UB researchers.

Published in Biomedical Health Central Public Health, the paper is the first systematic review of the prevalence of waterpipe smoking across countries, age groups and genders. Systematic reviews are conducted through an exhaustive and systematic search for, assessment and analysis of all relevant, peer-reviewed research ever published on a particular subject.

“Waterpipe smoking is a real epidemic in the world and it’s picking up in the U.S. too,” says Elie Akl, lead author and associate professor of medicine, family medicine and social and preventive medicine in the schools of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences and Public Health and Health Professions. Akl also holds a part-time appointment in the Department of Clinical Epidemiology and Biostatistics at McMaster University.

The UB review identified 38 relevant studies conducted in the U.S., the United Kingdom, Australia and Estonia, as well as countries in the Arab Gulf, including Lebanon, Pakistan, Egypt, Syria, Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, the United Arab Emirates and Yemen. Target populations of the studies were middle or high school students as young as 13 years of age, university students, adults and pregnant women.

While the paper reveals the highest rates of waterpipe smoking to be in Middle Eastern and Asian countries, where the practice has a centuries-long tradition, the researchers also found it is increasing in the U.S. and other western countries.

“The surveys included in this review found an alarming prevalence of waterpipe smoking among middle and high school students in the U.S.,” Akl says. “It was especially true of Arab-American students, who reported waterpipe usage ranging from 12 to 15 percent.”

The surveys also revealed that current rates of waterpipe smoking among adults is 6 percent in Pakistan, 4-12 percent in the Arabic Gulf region, 11 percent in Australia among Arab-speaking adults and 15 percent in Lebanon. Group waterpipe smoking was high in Lebanon, at 5 percent, and in Egypt, ranging between 11 and 15 percent. In Lebanon, between 5 and 6 percent of pregnant women also reported waterpipe smoking during pregnancy.

The UB review also found that approximately 10 percent of university students in the U.S. reported waterpipe smoking.

The Biomedical Health Central Public Health paper is Akl’s fourth publication on waterpipe smoking. A study he published last year in Chest Journal found that, contrary to popular perceptions, the effects of waterpipe smoking on pulmonary function are similar to those of cigarettes.

Akl says the current findings should be a wake-up call to public health agencies that they should directly address waterpipe smoking in their tobacco-control strategies.

“Awareness campaigns need to take into account that waterpipe smoking is increasing, especially among youth, and that it may be a gateway to cigarette use in adulthood,” he says.

“The problem is that some people are advocating the hookahs, or waterpipes, as safer than cigarettes,” he explains. “It’s perceived as less addictive. And because in the hookah, the smoke comes through a column of water, which is supposed to filter the smoke, it’s been seen as safer than cigarettes and other forms of tobacco consumption.”

But an earlier study by Akl and others published in the International Journal of Epidemiology has found that waterpipe tobacco smoking is significantly associated with lung cancer, respiratory illness, low birthweight and periodontal disease.

“Waterpipe smoking is seen as a more social, more sophisticated, more fashionable way of smoking tobacco,” he says, noting that hookah bars are opening up in cities throughout the U.S. and other western countries, as well as in the Middle East.

“This review reveals a need for a better understanding of the epidemiology of this new epidemic, especially concerning how waterpipe smoking may lead to cigarette smoking, so that public health agencies can best address these behaviors, particularly among youth,” says Akl.

The research was co-authored by Sameer K. Gunukula, Sohaib Aleem, Philippe Abou Jaoude and Roland Honeine, all of the UB Department of Medicine; Rawad Obeid of Wayne State University; and Jihad Irani of the University of Balamand in Beirut.