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Original Articles

Collision of waterpipe and cigarette smoking epidemics among youth in Arab countries

, , , , , , , & show all
Pages 530-536 | Received 09 May 2015, Accepted 27 Jul 2015, Published online: 04 Feb 2016
 

Abstract

Background: Waterpipe tobacco smoking (WTS) emerges as a new component of the global tobacco epidemic. Adolescents smoking waterpipe are susceptible to cigarette smoking, but limited research has characterized dual (cigarette plus waterpipe) users. The study objective is to determine the prevalence estimates of dual users to understand how “collision” of the two epidemics is evolving in the Arab countries.Methods: Data (n = 31,359; N = 6,109,572) were obtained from nationally representative Global Youth Tobacco Surveys (GYTSs) from 17 Arab countries. Current tobacco use was categorized into four groups—cigarette smoking only, WTS only, dual use, and never use. Weighted age-, sex-, and country-specific prevalence estimates along with 95% confidence intervals were reported.Results: Overall 3.0%, 6.1%, and 3.8% of youth were cigarette smokers only, WTS only, and dual users. Boys reported high prevalence estimates of cigarette smoking only (5.1% vs 1.1%), WTS only (7.4% vs 4.6%), and dual use (3.7% vs 2.1%) than girls. Dual-use estimates ranged from 0.7% in Oman to 15.0% in West Bank and WTS only ranged from 0.9% in Oman to 6.6% in United Arab Emirates.Conclusion: Dual use and WTS is well established among Arab youth and represents a new dimension to the global tobacco epidemic that may not respond to traditional tobacco control interventions.

Acknowledgements

Dr. Veeranki would like to thank the Department of Preventive Medicine and Community Health at the University of Texas Medical Branch for providing the logistic support. In addition, the authors would like to thank all personnel, including study participants, study coordinators, and organizations involved with the Global Youth Tobacco Survey. In particular, the authors would like to acknowledge the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention for making the data publicly available through the GTSS data portal.

Declaration of interest

KK and SV contributed to the study conception and design. SV obtained and created the data for analysis with LD. KK analyzed the data with assistance from SV, LD, SA, AZ, and YK and interpreted with results with assistance from SV, SA, FM, and KW. KA drafted the initial draft with assistance from SV. All authors contributed to the revision of the report and approved the version submitted.

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