Girls go gaga over hubby-bubbly in US
BY Agencies20 July 2012 1:56 AM GMT
Agencies20 July 2012 1:56 AM GMT
One out of four college girls in the US are hooked on to the hookah during early years, and many of them mistakenly believe that it is safer than cigarettes, a new study has found. Researchers from the Miriam Hospital’s Center for Behavioural and Preventive Medicine found the more alcohol girls consumed, the more likely they were to try the hookah, which originated from India and Persia.
Women who used marijuana engaged in hookah smoking more frequently than their peers, according to the journal of Psychology of Addictive Behaviours.
The phenomenon was mostly prevalent among the first year college students.
Many of them also mistakenly believe that hookah is safer than cigarettes, even though its use has been linked to many of the same diseases caused by cigarette smoking, including lung cancer, respiratory illness and periodontal disease.
Hookah smoking is a social activity during which users smoke tobacco filtered through a water pipe. Their tobacco mixtures vary in composition, with some having candy and fruit flavours to help mask the smoke’s harshness, according to a Miriam Hospital statement.
‘The popularity and social nature of hookah smoking, combined with the fact that college freshmen are more likely to experiment with risky behaviour, could set the stage for a potential public health issue, given what we know about the health risks of hookah smoking,’ said Robyn L Fielder, from The Miriam Hospital?s Center, who led the study.
As many as 483 first-year female college students took part in the initial survey about their pre-college hookah use, followed by 12 monthly on-line surveys about their experience with hookah smoking. Â Of the 343 participants who did not report pre-college hookah use, 23 per cent tried hookah tobacco smoking during their first year of college.
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