Abstract

INTRODUCTIONThe Global Youth Tobacco Survey’s findings have been used to support Ghana’s tobacco control legislation, monitor tobacco use among the youth and also used in meeting various Articles of the World Health Organization (WHO) Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC). These Articles include: Article 8 (Protection for exposure to tobacco smoke); Article 12 (Education, communication, training and public awareness); Article 13 (Tobacco advertising, promotion, and sponsorship); Article 14 (Demand reduction measures concerning tobacco dependence and cessation); and Article 16 (Sales to and by minors). Among the four waves of GYTS in Ghana, the 2017 GYTS was the first to assess waterpipe smoking, through optional questions included in the GYTS questionnaire. We assessed sex, age and regional differentials in waterpipe smoking among the youth in Ghana, and also explored the association between the use of other tobacco products and waterpipe use.METHODSThe GYTS employs a standardized methodology with self-administered questionnaires, consisting of core, optional, and country specific questions. Fourteen questions, out of the seventy-four (74) questions administered for the entire GYTS, assessed waterpipe tobacco smoking (WTS). Chi-squared test was used to assess sex, age, grade/form and regional differentials in waterpipe use. Furthermore, the association between smoking cigarettes, smokeless tobacco, electronic cigarettes and waterpipe smoking, was explored by employing a chi-squared test with a 5% significance level.RESULTSOf a total of 5664 students who participated in the study, 90.9% were aged 13–15 years. The respondents were almost equally distributed among males and females. Overall, 3.1% of the respondents had ever smoked waterpipe. The overall prevalence of current waterpipe use was 1.7%; with 2.1% in girls (95% CI: 0.9–4.7%) and 0.9% in boys (95% CI: 0.5–1.6%), p=0.033. Additionally, more than half (55.0%) of the current waterpipe users smoked three or more sessions per day. Surprisingly, close to half (46.9%) of the current waterpipe users smoked at home.CONCLUSIONSWaterpipe use, particularly among the female student population, represents an emerging tobacco epidemic and hence deserves immediate attention from authorities. This study revealed that waterpipe is being used among Junior High students in Ghana. Education on the health implications of waterpipe use should be intensified among the youth, to help minimize its use and to prevent its associated health harms.

Highlights

  • INTRODUCTION The Global Youth TobaccoSurvey’s findings have been used to support Ghana’s tobacco control legislation, monitor tobacco use among the youth and used in meeting various Articles of the World Health Organization (WHO) Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC)

  • Within Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA), higher waterpipe use prevalence of 8.1% among adolescents in school was reported in Gambia, where relatively high prevalence was observed among girls (11.4% of boys and 5.4% of girls)[19]

  • Even though Ghana reported low WTS21, the current prevalence is an indication of acceptance of the practice among the youth, especially the females, even though the practice is not recognized as part of the Ghanaian culture as is the case in the Eastern Mediterranean Region and North African countries

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Summary

Introduction

Survey’s findings have been used to support Ghana’s tobacco control legislation, monitor tobacco use among the youth and used in meeting various Articles of the World Health Organization (WHO) Framework Convention on Tobacco Control (FCTC). These Articles include: Article 8 (Protection for exposure to tobacco smoke); Article (Education, communication, training and public awareness); Article (Tobacco advertising, promotion, and sponsorship); Article (Demand reduction measures concerning tobacco dependence and cessation); and Article 16 (Sales to and by minors). Africa is considered to be at the beginning of the tobacco-use epidemic, there is a significant increase in the prevalence of tobacco use, especially among the youth. It is worth noting that waterpipe use has exceeded cigarette smoking among men and women, and is very common among the youth, in some countries in the Eastern Mediterranean Region (EMR)[3]

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