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Some colleges attract more hookah bars
YoungWomanHookah
Waterpipe smoking seems to be gaining popularity among young people. - photo by Stock photo

Larger and private colleges and universities seem to attract hookah cafes and lounges, but smoke-free policies decrease these odds, according to findings published in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine this month.

That may bode well for the long-term health of college-age students.

Water pipe smoking, more commonly known as hookah, boasts enticing flavors and a healthier reputation, increasing its popularity among college students. It is estimated that more than 10 percent of U.S. college students are current users.

However, recent evidence disputes claims that hookah is less harmful than cigarettes. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, hookah contains many of the same harmful toxins as cigarette smoke and has been associated with lung cancer, respiratory illness, low birthweight and periodontal disease.

“Water pipe smoking establishments are almost entirely unregulated, and there is very little information available on the industry’s expansion,” said Ramzi Salloum, Ph.D., an assistant professor in the department of health outcomes and policy in the University of Florida’s College of Medicine, who led the study. “Given the industry’s appeal for young adults and its efforts to target this age demographic, since many of them are under the legal drinking age, it is crucial to document hookah establishments’ proximity to colleges and universities and note the impact smoke-free campus policies can have.”

A greater density of hookah establishments may promote hookah smoking, as higher numbers of tobacco retailers have been associated with higher levels of cigarette smoking, according to the researchers.

The researchers identified 1,690 establishments nationwide that offered water pipe smoking in fall 2014 using online directories, compared with an estimated 725 outlets in a study from 2010. This total likely underestimates the number of actual establishments because not all of them are listed in online directories, which included Yelp, Hookah-Hookah, the Better Business Bureau and Hoover’s directories. Although the methods for calculating the numbers in these two studies differ, it appears the industry is rapidly expanding.

Among the 1,454 colleges and universities with residential student populations greater than 250 around the country, 554, or 38 percent, had at least one establishment that offered hookah within 3 miles, and 719, or 50 percent, had at least one within 9 miles. When examining differences by the size of the institution, 75 percent of institutions with more than 20,000 full-time students had at least one establishment within 3 miles, compared with 30 percent of institutions with fewer than 2,500 students. In addition, hookah establishments were almost twice as likely to be located near private institutions compared with public institutions.

“Economic factors may be at work here, with the stronger purchasing power of students attending private institutions accounting for the increased odds,” Salloum said.

However, both private and public institutions with smoke-free campus policies were almost half as likely to have a hookah establishment within 3 miles. These decreased odds could stem from the fact that institutions of higher education with smoke-free campus policies are located in a larger jurisdiction with stronger smoke-free laws or that hookah establishments are discouraged from locating in the immediate vicinity of the smoke-free campuses, according to the researchers.

“We hope that our findings will prompt state and local governments to consider targeted regulations that ban or limit these establishments near educational institutions and that water pipe smoking regulations are included in campuswide tobacco-related policies,” said Wasim Maziak, M.D., Ph.D., a professor at Florida International University and one of the collaborators on the study, along with researchers from the University of Florida, the University of South Carolina and the University of Michigan. “Hookah smoking places our youth at a health risk and must be taken seriously as part of the larger fight against tobacco and the preventable diseases it causes.”

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