Drug and Alcohol Dependence
Volume 76, Issue 1 , Pages 101-106, 5 October 2004

Factors related to frequency of narghile (waterpipe) use: the first insights on tobacco dependence in narghile users

  • W. Maziak

      Affiliations

    • Syrian Center for Tobacco Studies, P.O. Box 16542, Aleppo, Syria
    • Institute of Epidemiology and Social Medicine, University of Muenster, Muenster, Germany
    • Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author. Tel.: +963 21 2644246; fax: +963 21 26499150.
  • ,
  • K.D. Ward

      Affiliations

    • Syrian Center for Tobacco Studies, P.O. Box 16542, Aleppo, Syria
    • Center for Community Health, University of Memphis, Memphis, TN, USA
  • ,
  • T. Eissenberg

      Affiliations

    • Syrian Center for Tobacco Studies, P.O. Box 16542, Aleppo, Syria
    • Department of Psychology, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, VA, USA

Received 11 November 2003; received in revised form 13 April 2004; accepted 16 April 2004.

Abstract 

Aims: To evaluate factors related to level of narghile (waterpipe) use as a first step towards modeling tobacco dependence among narghile users. Design: Cross sectional survey done in 2003 using interviewer-administered anonymous questionnaires. Setting: Cafes/restaurants serving narghiles in Aleppo, Syria. Participants: Narghile smokers (161 men and 107 women; mean age, 30.1 ± 10.2, 161; age range, 18–68 years; response rate, 95.3%) randomly selected from the 17 cafes/restaurants sampled. Measurements: Frequency of narghile use (daily, weekly, monthly) was assessed as a function of several factors potentially indicative of dependence, including situational characteristics (where, when, and with whom smoking occurs; seasonality of use, and sharing of narghile), attitudes, and experience with quitting narghile use, escalation of use over time, future intentions regarding use, perception of being “hooked” on narghile, and cognitions/behaviors engaged in to support use (carrying one’s own narghile; think of narghile when it is not available; considering narghile for selection of cafes/restaurants). Findings: Frequency of narghile use was strongly correlated with participant’s subjective judgment of how hooked they are on narghile (coefficient, 0.5). Predictors of narghile use frequency according to multinomial logistic regression were: male gender, smoking mainly alone versus with others; smoking mainly at home versus outside; smoking more frequently since initiation, being hooked on narghile, carrying narghile, and considering it for cafe/restaurant choice. Conclusions: Our data reveal two main domains of a tobacco dependence syndrome likely to be relevant to narghile; the first reflects the effects of nicotine contained in narghile tobacco, and is not very different from what is seen with other tobacco products, and the second is unique to narghile and is related mainly to its social dimension, with more intensive smokers showing an increasingly individual pattern of narghile smoking.

Keywords:  Narghile, Waterpipe, Dependence, Smoking, Syria

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PII: S0376-8716(04)00100-0

doi:10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2004.04.007

Drug and Alcohol Dependence
Volume 76, Issue 1 , Pages 101-106, 5 October 2004