Abstract

BackgroundWaterpipe smoking is growing worldwide, but little is known of its epidemiology in the UK due to its absence from national health surveys. We sought to address this by calculating the prevalence of waterpipe smoking among secondary school students in southeast London.MethodsWe conducted a pooled secondary analysis of routine health surveillance surveys among 11–17 year olds in convenience-sampled secondary schools from three ethnically-diverse areas of southeast London. We calculated ever (lifetime) waterpipe use, and compared its sociodemographic correlates to ever (lifetime) cigarette use. In one area we collected data on patterns of waterpipe use.ResultsOf 2,098 respondents (mean age 14.1 ± 1.7 years, 55.7 % male, 46.6 % of black ethnicity), ever waterpipe use was 39.6 % (95 % CI 37.6–41.7 %) and was higher than that for ever cigarette use (32.4 %; 95 % CI 30.5–34.4). While waterpipe users were significantly and independently more likely to be male and of non-white ethnicities, at least 30 % of all age, gender and ethnic sub-groups had tried waterpipe smoking. In contrast, cigarette users were more likely to be older and of white ethnicity. In one of the three areas, over a quarter of waterpipe users were occasional or regular waterpipe smokers, and most were introduced to and currently used waterpipe in waterpipe-serving premises or friends’ homes.ConclusionsWaterpipe smoking prevalence was high in southeast London, and users exhibited a different sociodemographic profile to cigarette users. Waterpipe should be included in national health surveys of young people. National surveillance is warranted to help develop suitable interventions to prevent uptake and promote cessation.

Highlights

  • Waterpipe smoking is growing worldwide, but little is known of its epidemiology in the United Kingdom (UK) due to its absence from national health surveys

  • Waterpipe smoking, a nicotine delivery device where tobacco smoke is passed through water prior to inhalation, is endemic in the Middle East and Indian subcontinent, but is growing in prevalence worldwide [1,2,3]

  • Users are drawn to the array of flavours that are added to waterpipe tobacco, and the pipe is generally shared with peers over a 30 to 60 min period [7, 8]

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Waterpipe smoking is growing worldwide, but little is known of its epidemiology in the UK due to its absence from national health surveys. A nicotine delivery device where tobacco smoke is passed through water prior to inhalation, is endemic in the Middle East and Indian subcontinent, but is growing in prevalence worldwide [1,2,3]. Data among adults from Europe suggest up to 20 countries have waterpipe as its second most prevalent tobacco type after cigarettes, and the highest current rates found in Latvia (11.5 %), Lithuania (9.0 %), Cyprus (8.5 %) and Denmark (8.4 %) [4]. Past-30 day waterpipe prevalence is highest in Lebanon (36.9 %), West Bank (32.7 %) and parts of Eastern Europe (Latvia 22.7 %, Czech Republic 22.1 %, Estonia 21.9 %) [5]. Users are drawn to the array of flavours that are added to waterpipe tobacco, and the pipe is generally shared with peers over a 30 to 60 min period [7, 8]

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call