Hookah smoking can have health effects similar to cigarettes
Carrie Circosta and Brianne Carlon
Issue date: 11/14/06 Section: Features
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Students such as Eric Donovan, freshman business administration major, tried hookah for the first time last weekend at FireFly Lounge.
"I was at the guitar store and decided to stop by," Donovan said. "I used to smoke cigarettes but I quit. I like smoking hookah better. We were told by one of the owners that it was healthier than cigarettes. It is smoother than cigarettes."
Joe Loury, one of the three owners at FireFly, said smoking hookah is the best alternative to smoking cigarettes.
"The tobacco filters through the water," Loury said. "Smoking anything isn't healthy, but hookah is the safest alternative."
But some people believe college students, who are making hookah more popular in the United States, are being deceived.
"Hookahs are still a relatively new phenomenon in this country," said Cathy Backinger, acting chief of the National Cancer Institute's Tobacco Control Research Branch, in an article published in The New York Times. "A lot of young people think that because it feels smooth, there aren't any adverse consequences, but they're wrong."
Kenneth A. Krebs, former president of the American Academy of Periodontology, said in the article "Sheeshas are Nothing to Smile About," that tobacco being filtered through water doesn't necessarily make it healthier.
"Not only does water-pipe smoking include the same substances as cigarette smoke such as carbon monoxide and tar, tobacco used for water pipe smoking contains 2 to 4 percent nicotine versus 1 to 3 percent for cigarettes," Krebs said.
According to a 2005 World Health Organization study, although some nicotine is absorbed by the water, smokers can be exposed to enough to cause addiction. Also, a "typical one-hour-long water-pipe smoking session involves inhaling 100 to 200 times the volume of smoke inhaled with a single cigarette."
But Koury said there are factors to consider.
"You're usually sharing (a hookah) with multiple people," Koury said. "It depends on how big the group is and how many puffs you're taking."
Then there is the issue of second-hand smoke.
According to the WHO, "secondhand smoke from water pipes is a mixture of tobacco smoke in addition to smoke from the (charcoal) and therefore poses a serious risk for nonsmokers."
Ryan Brown, another co-owner of FireFly, said, "We have a good ventilation system," pointing to a fan set high in the wall. "It keeps the place pretty clear. And we have high ceilings," he said, although the scent of mixed fruits still lingered in the air.
A study in the Journal of Periodontology found that water-pipe smokers were five times more likely than non-smokers to show signs of gum disease. And in June 2004, Jane Henley, an epidemiologist at the American Cancer Society, found that men who smoked water pipes had five times the risk of lung cancer as non-smokers.
But Brown said hookah is not addictive, and although the tobacco used has a small amount of nicotine, it is less than a cigarette. Also, the tobacco carton says zero percent tar.
There will always be arguments about whether hookah is addicting, but one thing people need to be aware of is germs.
"Another thing that's different from cigarettes is the sharing," Backinger said. "Where there's sharing of a mouthpiece, there's a risk of infection, and there are some documented cases of herpes."
But Brown said there's nothing to worry about while puffing away at Firefly.
"We sanitize the mouth pieces after each use and hand out plastic covers to customers," Brown said.
And with Ohio passing Issue 5, banning smoking from public places, Firefly won't be affected by the change.
"If we were planning to become a restaurant, which we're not, it would affect us," Koury said. "Since 80 percent of our sales are tobacco, we are not affected by it."
Contact features correspondents Carrie Circosta at ccircost@kent.edu and Brianne Carlon at blcarlon@kent.edu.
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Viewing Comments 1 - 10 of 17
Jamie
posted 6/14/07 @ 2:00 PM EST
This article makes no sense..are you arguing for or against the hookahs???? Also the difference between smoking at a bar and smoking at a hookah bar is that people know they are going into a smoke filled atmosphere. (Continued…)
Josh
posted 12/09/07 @ 8:57 PM EST
I dont know where you got your info but I am a hookah smoker and all of the hookah I buy has 0.5% nicotine - not the 2-4 you suggest.
hooka
posted 8/08/08 @ 5:25 PM EST
I actually heard that one hookah session is = to 5 packs of ciggs. I guess it does matter what kind of shisha you buy.
Robin Anderson
posted 8/08/08 @ 10:18 PM EST
"According to a 2005 World Health Organization study, although some nicotine is absorbed by the water, smokers can be exposed to enough to cause addiction. (Continued…)
Stew
posted 8/11/08 @ 5:28 PM EST
if you don't like it don't smoke it. simple as that! otherwise, leave us happy smokers alone in our hookah bar and outside far, far away from all of you. (Continued…)
anonymous
posted 8/19/08 @ 9:26 AM EST
the only thing I have too say to this is DUH!
roulette strategy
posted 9/04/08 @ 2:40 AM EST
This article makes no sense..are you arguing for or against the hookahs???? Also the difference between smoking at a bar and smoking at a hookah bar is that people know they are going into a smoke filled atmosphere. (Continued…)
mee
posted 6/25/09 @ 5:22 PM EST
I think you hookah smokers need to chill. The article is simply a source of information. Even if some of it is incorrect (percentage of nicotine), the bottom line is IT'S BAD FOR YOU. (Continued…)
Chester Nimitz
posted 6/28/09 @ 11:44 AM EST
Gawd you hippy's are dumb.
Robin Anderson
posted 7/01/09 @ 5:08 PM EST
That's it, of course! The mighty p-bear & stew & the, oh-so-annonymous buttercup known as gary are all part of the twitter gang, being the twits that they are! Um. (Continued…)
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