Hookah, cigarette, and marijuana use: A prospective study of smoking behaviors among first-year college women
Introduction
Smoking behaviors, including cigarette, marijuana, and hookah use, all undermine the health of young people. Cigarette smoking and marijuana use have been well-characterized in the United States. For example, 15% of college students report current (past 30 days) cigarette smoking, and 19% report current marijuana use (Johnston, O'Malley, Bachman, & Schulenberg, 2012). Much is known about the antecedents of both cigarette smoking (U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, 2012) and marijuana use (Hall & Degenhardt, 2007). However, less is known about hookah use in the US, especially with regard to the co-occurrence of hookah, cigarette, and marijuana use, and the temporal pattern of initiation among these three smoking behaviors. Given that all three behaviors involve smoking, it is reasonable to consider whether initiation of one might predispose to initiation of another. The current study provides a preliminary investigation into these relationships with a special emphasis on the role of hookah tobacco smoking, a growing trend among young adults (Cobb, Ward, Maziak, Shihadeh, & Eissenberg, 2010).
Hookah use has been increasing worldwide (Akl et al., 2011), especially among adolescents and college students (Cobb et al., 2010). In representative samples of American high school students, 10% report past month or lifetime hookah tobacco use (Barnett et al., 2009, Jordan and Delnevo, 2010, Manderski et al., 2012, Primack et al., 2009). Among American college students, lifetime prevalence ranges from 15% to 48% (Braun et al., 2012, Eissenberg et al., 2008, Fielder et al., 2012, Jarrett et al., 2012, Primack et al., 2008, Sutfin et al., 2011). Hookah use is now almost as common, if not as common or more common, as cigarette smoking among American college students (Grekin and Ayna, 2012, Nuzzo et al., 2013). Hookah lounges, now ubiquitous in college towns (Sutfin et al., 2011), may be especially appealing to students under age 21, who cannot legally enter traditional bars. Hookah smoking is less common among Americans beyond traditional college age (i.e., 18–24 years old); in the 2009–2010 National Adult Tobacco Survey of over 118,000 adults aged 18 years or older, the prevalence of current waterpipe use was 7.8% among 18–24 year olds, 1.2% among 25–44 year olds, and 0.3% among 45–64 year olds, for an overall prevalence of 1.5% (King, Dube, & Tynan, 2012). Thus, the college years appear to be a particularly high risk period for hookah experimentation.
Hookah tobacco smoking is a growing public health concern (Cobb et al., 2010, Knishkowy and Amitai, 2005). Hookah smokers inhale nicotine, carbon monoxide, and large volumes of smoke, including toxicants and carcinogens (Cobb et al., 2011, Daher et al., 2010). Research on the health effects of hookah smoking indicates a harmful impact on lung function (Raad et al., 2011) and increased odds of lung cancer, respiratory illness, and periodontal disease (Akl et al., 2010).
Research suggests that there may be gender differences in patterns of hookah use. Several studies with adolescent samples have found that boys are more likely to report lifetime use of hookah compared to girls (Barnett et al., 2009, Primack et al., 2009, Sterling and Mermelstein, 2011). Moreover, a review of seven studies on hookah use among college students found that all but one showed a higher rate of hookah use among males compared to females (Grekin & Ayna, 2012). Nonetheless, many college women experiment with hookah use; we have reported previously that 34% of female college students used hookah during their first year on campus (Fielder et al., 2012), and 8% of women surveyed through the National College Health Assessment II reported hookah use in the past 30 days (Jarrett et al., 2012). Because tobacco use patterns (Rigotti, Lee, & Wechsler, 2000), psychosocial correlates, and reasons for smoking (Branstetter, Blosnich, Dino, Nolan, & Horn, 2012) differ by gender, it is important to examine hookah smoking behavior specifically among women.
Hookah smoking has been associated with cigarette smoking (Barnett et al., 2009, Braun et al., 2012, Eissenberg et al., 2008, Jordan and Delnevo, 2010, Manderski et al., 2012, Sutfin et al., 2011). Because almost all studies of hookah use have been cross-sectional (Grekin & Ayna, 2012), it remains unclear whether hookah use may spur cigarette smoking, cigarette smoking may spur hookah use, or the two smoking behaviors simply co-occur. Hookah tobacco use may lead to uptake of cigarette smoking. Indeed, hookah, with its flavored tobacco and smoother smoke, may introduce non-smokers to nicotine in a manner that is less harsh than cigarettes. Over time, because hookah smoking requires an apparatus and is time-consuming (Braun et al., 2012), and because cigarettes are portable and obtained more easily, hookah users may supplement their hookah use with cigarette smoking or switch to cigarettes (Rastam et al., 2011). Hookah use may also re-introduce those who have already quit smoking to tobacco, triggering relapse (Maziak, 2011). Because hookah smoking delivers nicotine, it confers risk for tobacco dependence (Cobb et al., 2011). Alternatively, cigarette smokers who try hookah may favor the latter given the flavored tobacco and less harsh smoke, leading them to substitute hookah smoking for cigarette use. At the same time, hookah and cigarette smoking may both result from shared genetic predispositions (Agrawal, Budney, & Lynskey, 2012) and underlying personality traits, such as sensation-seeking or impulsivity, which have been linked to tobacco use (Granö et al., 2004, Spillane et al., 2010).
Hookah smoking is also associated with marijuana use (Braun et al., 2012, Jarrett et al., 2012, Sterling and Mermelstein, 2011, Sutfin et al., 2011). Hookah use and marijuana use reflect similar motives, such as social enhancement, relaxation, and experimentation (Braun et al., 2012, Lee et al., 2007, Smith-Simone et al., 2008). The social context is important for hookah use, as nearly all (96%) college students smoke hookah with their friends (Braun et al., 2012). Peer influence can create availability and exposure opportunity (Pinchevsky et al., 2012) as well as an environment in which use of both hookah and marijuana is encouraged (Agrawal et al., 2012). Also, the route of administration may be a factor, as some hookah users smoke marijuana out of the same waterpipe they use for tobacco (Smith-Simone et al., 2008). As with cigarette use, hookah and marijuana use may both be related to a shared genetic predisposition to disinhibition, general problem behavior, and substance use (Agrawal et al., 2012).
Little research has addressed the prospective relationship between hookah use and cigarette/marijuana use. Only two longitudinal studies have explored hookah as a predictor of cigarette use. One study sampled Danish adolescent males and found that hookah use increased the odds of transitioning from experimentation to regular cigarette smoking over eight months (Jensen, Cortes, Engholm, Kremers, & Gislum, 2010). The second sampled Jordanian adolescents and found that hookah smokers were twice as likely as non-smokers to become cigarette smokers two years later (Mzayek et al., 2012). Interestingly, in the latter study, the reverse pattern was also true; that is, cigarette smokers were twice as likely as non-smokers to become hookah smokers, but this association was not statistically significant. To our knowledge, no longitudinal studies have sampled Americans or college students or examined hookah as a predictor of marijuana use.
The primary purpose of this study was to examine the relationship between hookah tobacco smoking and (a) cigarette and (b) marijuana use using a prospective design. We focused on college students given the high prevalence of hookah use in this population (Grekin & Ayna, 2012), especially compared to those older than 18–24 years (King et al., 2012). We focused on women because tobacco use patterns differ by gender (Branstetter et al., 2012, Rigotti et al., 2000). Using data from a larger study of women, we examined pre-college hookah use as a predictor of initiating cigarette and marijuana use during the first year of college. The secondary purpose of this study was to examine pre-college cigarette and marijuana use as a predictor of initiating hookah use during the first year of college. To control for a general propensity toward substance use, we controlled for binge drinking as well as two personality constructs that have been linked to smoking behaviors (viz., impulsivity and sensation-seeking; Granö et al., 2004, Spillane et al., 2010) in all analyses.
We hypothesized that pre-college hookah tobacco smoking would increase women's likelihood of initiating cigarette and marijuana use during the first year of college. We did not make any predictions for the opposite direction of effect.
Section snippets
Participants
Eligible participants were first-year female college students (N = 483) engaged in a 13-month longitudinal study from August 2009 to August 2010 designed to investigate health behaviors and relationships during the transition to college. The sample size was chosen to reach a large proportion of the population while maintaining feasibility. According to the University's Office of Institutional Research, the sample represented 26% of all incoming female students for the 2009–2010 academic year,
Substance use initiation
Table 1 displays the prevalence of initiation of each smoking behavior during the first year of college among women who reported no pre-college use of each substance. For example, 51 of the 307 women reporting no pre-college hookah use (17%) initiated hookah tobacco use during the first year of college.
Pre-college hookah use as a predictor of cigarette initiation/resumption during the first year of college
The model predicted initiation/resumption of cigarette use, LR χ2 (df = 5, N = 386) = 30.03, p < .0001. Controlling for covariates, pre-college hookah use significantly predicted initiating/resuming
Discussion
This study – the first prospective study to test the association between hookah and cigarette use among American students and to test the association between hookah and marijuana use – produced three main findings. First, in our sample of first-year women, 28% used hookah before college, and 17% of those with no previous hookah use tried it during their first year of college. Thus, by the end of their first year of college, 45% of female students had tried hookah tobacco smoking (see Fielder et
Role of funding sources
This research was supported by grant R21-AA018257 from the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism to Michael P. Carey. NIAAA had no role in the study design, data collection, data analysis or interpretation, writing of the manuscript, or the decision to submit the manuscript for publication.
Contributors
Robyn L. Fielder, Kate B. Carey, and Michael P. Carey designed the study. Robyn L. Fielder collected and analyzed the data, reviewed the literature, and wrote the first draft of the manuscript. All authors contributed to and critically reviewed the manuscript, and all have approved the final manuscript.
Conflict of interest
All authors declare that they have no conflicts of interest.
Acknowledgments
At the time of data collection, all authors were with the Center for Health and Behavior at Syracuse University. The authors thank Annelise Sullivan for her assistance with data collection.
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2019, Addictive BehaviorsCitation Excerpt :The prevalence of hookah experimentation among adolescents seems to be increasing across the globe with relatively higher rates in Middle Eastern countries, where it has traditionally been used. ( Amrock, Gordon, Zelikoff, & Weitzman, 2014; Fakhari, Mohammadpoorasl, Nedjat, Hosseini, & Fotouhi, 2015; Fielder, Carey, & Carey, 2013; Jordan & Delnevo, 2010; Mzayek et al., 2012; Smith et al., 2011; Smith et al., 2011). For instance, studies conducted in Lebanon among intermediate and secondary students (average age 15 years) showed that 25% were past 30-day users and 65–66% were ever hookah users (Akl et al., 2011; Shihadeh, Azar, Antonios, & Haddad, 2004).
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