Shisha vs. “Water-pipe” : The Question of a
Unifying Term
Hookah, Narghile
and Shisha are definitely not “local words” (Maziak). “Hookah” is used
(with slight spelling variations) in India, Pakistan, the USA, Canada and many
English speaking countries. “Narghile”, with the same reservations, is
prevalent in many countries of the Middle East, including Turkey, where it is
the official name (“nargile” with no “h”), and Iran where it is one of both
national forms with the Qalyân. “Narghile” is also used in many European and
African languages. As for “Shisha”, it has been a word widely employed in Asia
and Africa for centuries. Today, its related service (within the so-called
“shisha bars”, “shisha lounges”, etc.) is offered in almost all countries of
the world.
By contrast, I am
afraid the word “water-pipe” lacks the necessary essence in a field where the
socio-cultural context is known to be complex and highly important in relation
to biology and psychopharmacology. So, I would encourage my colleagues to
keep it exclusively for experiments on smoking machines in a laboratory and never
use it for real human smoking. Another problem with “water-pipe” is its strong
connotations with the drug culture, particularly in the USA in the context of
the Drug Paraphernalia Laws(*). Indeed, peoples of the Middle
East are always shocked when they hear or see that the shisha they have been
using for centuries in convivial settings, is portrayed in the West as a mere
drug taking device.
If only one among
the 3 major universal words (Hookah, Narghile, Shisha) had to be kept, I would
personally recommend Shisha. On one hand, this word is used everywhere in the world. It can be
easily pronounced and memorised by almost any individual in the world (remember
why the commercial word “Kodak” was chosen). On the other, like “Hookah”
(Arabic for urn), “Narghile” (Sanskrit then Persian for coco nut) and “Goza”
(Egyptian Arabic for coco nut), Shisha is consistent with the wide diversity
covered by an anthropological genus that perfectly reflects the phylogenetic
link between the common element (water recipient) and its remote –and
considered so important- origin when a coco nut, half filled with water, was
used as a smoke filter. From this perspective, Shisha is highly generic,
understood as descriptive of all members of a genus.
I also think the
question of sharing knowledge among researchers has no relation with the words
by themselves, be they narghile, hookah, shisha or “water-pipe”, but rather
with the will to cooperate and take stock of the existing work carried in this
field (*) and in any language. Unfortunately, this has not been done
when a report for a supranational organisation (WHO), supposed to be based on a
“world review”, was recently prepared on this subject. Besides, I may wonder
where the real linguistic standardisation problem lies when recurring studies
(Natto 2005 and Tamim 2006, just to mention recent ones) mistake one product
for the other. Finally, the selection of one word should have been discussed
among researchers. Unfortunately, this did not happen so the related choices
are obviously arbitrary and hence, questionable.
This is to comment on the following recently published eletter:
The issue of nomenclature: Wasim Maziak (17 June 2006)
In a dictionary search for Hookah, Hubble-bubble, Narghile, Arghile,
Water-pipe and Shisha, the Oxford Paperback Dictionary [1] defines Hookah
as an oriental tobacco pipe with a long tube passing through a glass
container that cools the smoke as it is drawn thr...
This is to comment on the following recently published eletter:
The issue of nomenclature: Wasim Maziak (17 June 2006)
In a dictionary search for Hookah, Hubble-bubble, Narghile, Arghile,
Water-pipe and Shisha, the Oxford Paperback Dictionary [1] defines Hookah
as an oriental tobacco pipe with a long tube passing through a glass
container that cools the smoke as it is drawn through and defines Hubble-
bubble as (i) a simple Hookah, (ii) a bubbling sound and (iii) a confused
talk. No definition was given in this Oxford dictionary to Narghile,
Arghile, Shisha or Water-pipe. Al-Mawrid [2] defines Hookah into its
literal meaning as well as Narghile and Shisha (the Arabic word). It
defines Water-pipe as (i) a water tube and (ii) Narghile and gives the
term Narghile its literal meaning. Al-Mawrid also gives no definition to
Arghile or Shisha. In this context, the term Hookah dominates. Therefore,
the conclusion that the term Water-pipe has the strength of highlighting a
unique and unifying feature of all other local types [3] has to be
reconsidered.
It is the scientific literature as well as Media which paves the way
for the publicity of scientific terms. In this respect, one can review the
deep effect of Media on the widespread use of scientific terms (acronyms)
such as AIDS and SARS to the extent of publicity despite the specificity
of both terms and the deficient knowledge of the public. Therefore, with
the international use of Shisha as well as benefiting the deep effect of
Media, the term Shisha, in my opinion, will be more appropriate for the
scientific literature increasing the potential of sharing and
communicating research results [3].
It is interesting to say that in the search for the definition of
Shisha, the term Shish-kebab was found in both dictionaries and I believe
that the habit of Shisha smoking is of no less significance than the habit
of eating Shish-kebab.
References:
1- Liebeck H, Pollard E: The Oxford Paperback Dictionary. Oxford
University Press 1994.
2- Ba'albaki M: Al-Mawrid: A Basic Modern English-Arabic Dictionary.
Beirut- Lebanon 2002.
3- Maziak W: Eletter: The issue of nomenclature. TC online 17 June 2006.
I thank the authors of letters regarding our published work (Ward et
al, 2006) on their useful remarks. It is self-understandable that no one
uses the world waterpipe when asking the public about this tobacco use
method, but use the local word for it. The same way that we never ask the
public about ischemic heart disease but use this term extensively in
research papers about this problem. It is also understandable that t...
I thank the authors of letters regarding our published work (Ward et
al, 2006) on their useful remarks. It is self-understandable that no one
uses the world waterpipe when asking the public about this tobacco use
method, but use the local word for it. The same way that we never ask the
public about ischemic heart disease but use this term extensively in
research papers about this problem. It is also understandable that there
is a need to use some unified term related to this tobacco use method in
order to facilitate the indexing, search, and communication of research
results related to this tobacco use method. While the waterpipe may not be
a perfect term, local words describing this method (hookah, shisha,
narghile, etc) can not be used as a unified term because of their local
nature. The term waterpipe has the strength of highlighting a unique and
unifying feature of all these local types; that is the passage of smoke
through the water before inhalation by the smokers. In the end, people are
free to use whatever term they see optimal in their research papers, but
having a unified term at least in their key words will increase the
potential of sharing their research results with all interested in this
issue.
This is to comment on the following recently published eletter:
Chaouachi K: Syria, Lebanon, Tobacco Research in General and Narghile
(Hookah, Shisha) Smoking in Particular. TC Online 8 June 2006.
I completely agree with the statement that Shisha is now used
internationally because of the global hookah craze whereas “waterpipe” is
no hypostasis and adhere to the notice that this wo...
This is to comment on the following recently published eletter:
Chaouachi K: Syria, Lebanon, Tobacco Research in General and Narghile
(Hookah, Shisha) Smoking in Particular. TC Online 8 June 2006.
I completely agree with the statement that Shisha is now used
internationally because of the global hookah craze whereas “waterpipe” is
no hypostasis and adhere to the notice that this word creates
bibliographic noise in databases since it also refers to household
infrastructure plumbing equipments [1]. Goza and Boury, however, are two
other common names in Egypt. While Shisha and Boury may be synonymously
asked for in a café shop by tobacco smokers in Egypt, Goza- not available
now in all café shops- is the favorite for some smokers; especially
Hashish smokers.
The use of Shisha as a substitute for cigarettes after quitting, and
the fact that Shisha triggers relapse for some cigarette quitters is
indeed a unique and worrisome observation [1, 2]. In addition, the
initiation of Shisha smoking by a significant number of cigarette smokers
is truly a significant unintended consequence of cigarette smoking
cessation. While tobacco smokers who are only Shisha smokers never
initiate cigarette smoking upon quitting, cigarette quitters may initiate
Shisha smoking. However, cigarette quitters who initiate Shisha smoking
are highly expected to resume cigarette smoking because they soon realize,
under the effect of nicotine dependency, the ease of smoking a cigarette
while reading, driving or talking in the telephone, for example.
References:
1- Chaouachi K: Syria, Lebanon, Tobacco Research in General and Narghile
(Hookah, Shisha) Smoking in Particular. TC Online eletter 8 June 2006.
2- Ward KD, Eissenberg T, Rastam S, Asfar T,Mzayek F, Fouad MF, Hammal
F,Mock J, Maziak W: The tobacco epidemic in Syria. Tobacco Control 2006;
15; 24-29.
Being a son of a famous well-qualified owner of a café shop, I have
been, since the early days of my perception, in direct contact with Goza
and Shisha smokers.
Goza is a modified form of Shisha. It has its head, body, water-container,
and hose [1]. However, Goza has no mouth-piece separated from the hose and
no disposable plastic mouth-piece is served or commonly used. Yet, the
water-container of Goza was and still is ma...
Being a son of a famous well-qualified owner of a café shop, I have
been, since the early days of my perception, in direct contact with Goza
and Shisha smokers.
Goza is a modified form of Shisha. It has its head, body, water-container,
and hose [1]. However, Goza has no mouth-piece separated from the hose and
no disposable plastic mouth-piece is served or commonly used. Yet, the
water-container of Goza was and still is made from metal and the hose is 1
-1.5 meter long semi-dry sloping reed in which the partitions are hollowed
through the use of a thin heated auger (not anyone can do this). Moreover,
the water container of Goza has a small opening covered by a small piece
of soft leather fastened by rolling several loops of thread or elastic to
the lower end of the body, which acts as a valve allowing smoke entrapped
in the vacuum space to be expelled between inhalations or before use by a
sharing smoker. However, this valve ("Raffas") was devoid in earlier Goza.
Serving both Goza and Shisha necessitates changing water from time to
time, frequent cleaning of the body internals using a thick heated auger
followed by several washings using hot water, and flaming of the lighter
before being placed over the head. Unlike Shisha, however, the water-
container of Goza can be placed in a small basin filled with cold water
while not in use. But, Goza necessitates holding it while smoking; usually
by the smoker himself. In this respect, it is interesting to say that some
Goza smokers were seen to fantastically design a metallic short stand with
a movable ball bearing socket in order to avoid keeping hold of Goza and
to freely pass the hose from one smoker to another. This altogether with
decorations of Goza or Shisha implies the deep effect of the habit on some
smokers.
Up to the nineties of the passed century, only adults and elderly men were
seen smoking Goza or Shisha. It was extremely rare to see a child (17-19
years old) who smokes Goza or Shisha. To my experience, having a seat and
table in a café shop was only an act of adults. Children were not allowed
to enter any café shop except for watching the T.V. No child could dare to
ask for Goza or Shisha otherwise he will be forced out or remembered to
his parents or guardian. Moreover, a cigarette smoking child was
considered violating the commonly accepted traditions of society. However,
cigarette smoking by homeless children was only accepted and pitied at the
same time by society during these days. Therefore, with the dramatic
changes in the accepted norms by new societies, it has become usual to see
a café shop partly occupied by children smoking tobacco.
From another perspective, maassel was and still is the most commonly used
tobacco in Goza or Shisha smoking. Maassel is of three common degrees:
hot, moderate and cold. Flavored tobacco, on the other hand, has become
widely available in most café shops. Both can be provided in the café shop
by the server but maassel; in addition, can be purchased by the smoker
himself. Unlike maassel, flavored tobacco can be easily smoked by a child
without feeling lightheadedness, headache or an altered state of
consciousness. Therefore, it has become usual to see children in café
shops asking for an apple, peach, banana, or cherry Shisha. They usually
ask for it cheerfully as if they were asking for a drink. However, in
underdeveloped or developing countries a question may be raised about home
circumstances, financial support and character of the child who can pay
for multiple drinks as well as Shisha smoking in a café shop.
In the past, smoking Goza or Shisha by elderly females was accepted by
society and considered as equal or parallel to snuff dipping or snuff
inhalation; a habit that was widely prevalent among old females at that
time. While the habit of smoking tobacco by adult females was considered
pornographic, only adult female with the nickname "Mealemma" {(Master) or
a female in charge of a café shop or agency for example} was accepted as a
Shisha smoker. At the present time, with the wide prevalence of
Satellites, and Media over-flow [2] as well as sexual effects, it has
become familiar to see adult females sitting freely in café shops and
smoking flavored Shishas.
Maassel can be considered the most commonly used tobacco by dependent Goza
or Shisha smokers. Some of those dependent Goza or Shisha smokers may be
Hashish smokers. In the past, most café shops had an isolated corner for
Hashish smokers who were given a due consideration by the server. However,
because of a governmental pursue the habit of Hashish smoking has been
almost eradicated in café shops. Nevertheless, "Bango" (an intoxicating
plant leaves) has become the alternative despite the war against both.
Serving a Hashish or Bango smoker differs from serving a maassel or
flavored tobacco smoker. Maassel or flavored tobacco smoking is served by
asking for alternative heads on an individual basis where the server is
entirely responsible to provide a highly working Shisha or Goza with the
head fully filled with tobacco and covered with a burning lighter. in
Hashish smoking, however, a set of heads usually five or ten made from
crockery are first filled with maassel and placed before the smoker over a
wooden stand where the smoker covers maassel with Hashish cut into small
discs (approximately .5-1mm thick and .3-.5 cm in diameter) or Bango
spread over in a coarse powdered form. This entails that the head in
Hashish smoking is only 1/4 filled with maassel ("Tasheirah"). Moreover,
and unlike maassel or flavored tobacco smoking, the server in Hashish
smoking will join the smoker where he is required to change the heads,
flame the lighter before every time another head is used and even share in
smoking.
While cigarettes can be filled with Hashish or Bango to have a "Saroukh"
(rocket) by some smokers, Goza or Shisha is essentially instrumental in
Hashish or Bango smoking habit. This simply may be a corollary to the well
known fact that Goza or Shisha smoking is a social habit practiced and
shared in groups. In addition to health hazards relevant to the used
tobacco, type of lighter as well as the risk of disease transmission
through sharing the hose of Goza [3-5], Hashish or Bango smoking becomes
more hazardous. Therefore, endeavors and strategies aimed at
understanding, analyzing and preventing this habit should be developed and
implemented by all concerned authorities.
References
1. Maziak W, Ward KD, Afifi Soweid RA, Eissenberg T: Tobacco smoking
using a waterpipe: a re-emerging strain in a global epidemic. Tobacco
Control 2004; 13: 327-333.
2. Chaouachi K: Eletters: About the so-called epidemic and the poor
smoking people - Ward KD, Eissenberg T, Rastam S, Asfar T,Mzayek F, Fouad
MF, Hammal F,Mock J, Maziak W: The tobacco epidemic in Syria. Tobacco
Control 2006; 15; 24-29.
3. Salem ES, Sami A: Studies on pulmonary manifestations of goza smokers.
Chest 1974; 65:599.
4. Shihadeh A: Investigation of mainstream smoke aerosol of the argileh
water pipe. Food Chem Toxicol 2003; 41:143–52.
5. Al-Belasy FA: The relationship of "shisha" (water pipe) smoking to
postextraction dry socket. J Oral Maxillofac Surg 2004; 62:10-14.
This is to comment on
the following recently published study:
Ward KD,
Eissenberg T, Rastam S, Asfar T,Mzayek F, Fouad MF, Hammal F,Mock J, Maziak W. The
tobacco epidemic in Syria. Tobacco Control 2006;15;24-29.
About
the So-Called Epidemic and the Poor Smoking People
The paper is globally unbalanced in
favour of a certain focus on narghile (hookah, shisha) smoking. After reading
the three following quotations, the reader may wonder whether we can call
hookah smoking an “epidemic” in Syria:
1-"The
prevalence of cigarette smoking was 56.9% for men and 17.0% for women, while
the prevalence of waterpipe smoking was 20.2% for men and 4.8% for women (fig 1)"
2-"The
opposite pattern was observed for waterpipe, with 1.0% smoking daily (1.4% for
men and 0.6% for women), and 10.6% smoking occasionally (18.8% of men and 4.2%
of women). The prevalence of combined daily use of cigarette and waterpipe was
reported rarely—0.1% (0.1% men, 0.1% women)."
3-"Daily
cigarette smokers averaged 20.8 (SD 14) cig/day (23.6 (13.9) for men and 12.8
(11) for women), while weekly waterpipe smokers smoked on average 1.7 (1.1)
waterpipe/week (1.6 (1) for men and 1.7 (1.4) for women)."
We encourage our
colleagues to inform the Syrian Ministry of Health of these statistics and urge
it to take steps to curb the cigarette epidemic in this country. Of course the
task is huge because of the nature of the market and the diverse interests at
stake. Syrians smoke national, international, smuggled and counterfeited
cigarettes. Certainly the solution is regional integration and cooperation.
Syria and Lebanon, where more than a half of the population smokes cigarettes
in both countries, can work hand in hand towards a Middle East free from
tobacco all the more that they are one same people.
So, we are afraid
“epidemic” might not be the best word to describe the revival of narghile use
in the Middle East. Besides, a corresponding scenario was proposed two years
ago by the same team (1). According to it, the Arab information satellite
television channels would have been greatly responsible for the development of
the hookah craze. Unfortunately, such a conclusion is not in agreement with
our socio-anthropological
research findings in the Middle East which point to at least 15 factors set out
and analysed in an early document (2).
Now, if "quitting
is also more prevalent among waterpipe smokers especially in the poorer
sections of the society", then this is good news because one reason
behind the failures of many tobacco prevention programmes in the world is not
dealing with the health consequences of poverty in this field. By good fortune,
great original researchers showed how marginalized groups adopt unexpected
strategies to adapt to any new situation stemming from rises in tobacco prices.
Just to mention some of them, they may leave shorter butts which is
unfortunately an extremely hazardous behaviour (3). They may also hand-roll
cigarettes that pose higher oral cancer risks (4). More, they can stuff hand
rolled cigarettes with the remaining tobacco from the butts of other, used
filters and dry leaves, or share the same cigarette (5).
About Carbon
Monoxide Levels
“Results suggest that waterpipe users are exposed to
more CO than previously reported (we observed a mean increase from 5.6 ppm
before use to 36.3 ppm after use (p , 0.01), compared to the mean of 14.2 ppm
after waterpipe use reported by Shafagoj and Mohammed)”.
This fact may be surprising for the
authors. However, this is in agreement with our own findings so we will be
happy to comment on it but only when the corresponding study is out since it is
only an announcement. Indeed, we regret that the authors too often refer to
forthcoming publications.
About
the Adaptation of Questionnaires
Kozlowski actually
warned against the misuse, in English, of the words “craving” and “urge” (6,
7). So, we really wonder how, in a sophisticated language like Arabic, these
concepts, and the subtleties they convey, will be rendered in a corresponding
translated questionnaire. Many studies in this field refer to “adapted”
versions of internationally known and validated questionnaires (like
Fagerstrom’s, Tiffany–Drobes’, Prokorov’s, Hughes-Hatsukami’s, etc.) and,
sometimes, to an Arabic “version” of them. However, they are never made public.
Since science is based on the possibility offered for any researcher to
reproduce, in the same conditions, any experience previously carried on, we
think the so-called documents should be annexed to the studies publishing the
corresponding results. Indeed, it is all the more easy that in most cases the
adapted questionnaires are very short in length. From there, we hope to see the
Arabic version of the Tiffany-Drobes questionnaire published soon so our team,
presently working on dependence patterns, can test, in its turn, its claimed
applicability.
Also note that the
same Kozlowski warned against the use of smoking machines in the field of
cigarettes, where, however, the smoking session (c. 5 minutes) is extremely
short in comparison with the hookah (30-60 minutes)(8). So, this kind of cogent
reflection may render questionable a certain number of findings (9).
About
Initiation Age
Strangely enough, statistics reveal
that there is no so-called children use in Syria:
"Age of initiation differed according to method
of smoking and gender. On average, men initiated use of cigarettes at age 17.9
(5.3) years and waterpipe at 25.5 (9.1) years, while women initiated use of
cigarettes at 22.5 (8.4) years and waterpipe at 28.9 (9.9) years (p , 0.05 for
all gender and smoking method comparisons by t test)."
Consequently, and
since Syria is an Arab country, this result is apparently not in agreement with
the first Advisory Note on “Waterpipe” smoking ever published by WHO (World
Health Organisation). This last document states, among other errors that could
have been avoided, that in the Arab world (described as “South-West
Asia and North Africa”):
“it is not uncommon for children to smoke with their parents” (10). In fact, our
socio-anthropological work showed that in Syria as in many other countries of
the region, narghile (hookah, shisha) initiation is more akin to a kind of
“rite of passage” (2).
About
Dependence
"Less
interest in quitting and a higher quit rate among waterpipe users compared to
cigarettes possibly indicate lower level of nicotine dependence among waterpipe
users."
In a former study (11), on
which we already commented (12), one assumption was that"nicotine dependence may also result from repeated inhalation of
tobacco smoke from a waterpipe [...] Until recently, no studies have
characterised a waterpipe withdrawal study of seven waterpipe using men, daily
use was associated syndrome, though some of the hallmarks of dependence are
apparent: continued use despite potential health risks, financial cost, and
reported inability/difficulty quitting."
In order to spare
time and from our original transdisciplinary experience, we would be happy if
our colleagues would accept to contemplate other possible research orientations
in this important field. Indeed, on one hand, original research on narghile
will help, not only understand the dependence phenomenon related to the use of
narghile, but also the dependence process as a whole and, most importantly,
regarding cigarette smoking. People do not necessarily smoke the hookah for
nicotine and another evidence for this is that the fashionable “hookah lounges”
already offer herbal fruit-flavoured tobacco-free smoking mixtures to their
patrons.
On the other hand,
there is a serious debate over the central role of nicotine in the dependence
process (13). Indeed, the importance of flavours (only in the case of tobamel,
the popular tobacco-molasses based smoking mixture) would make the dependence very
similar to that induced by coffee (14). Thus, not only nicotine but MonoAmine
Oxidase Inhibitors (MAOI), other not so « important » low-dose
potentially dependence-inducing alkaloids, ligands of opioid receptors, and
other substances, might play a not so minor role in the dependence process
(15).
About
Anthropological Work
The paper refers to a
“new” orientation of the team activities within the framework of the so-called
“grounded theory approach”. Here, we would like to emphasise that the
anthropological work implies very long observation periods. In our case, we
actually carried on early socio-anthropological work in the Middle East for a
period of four years. We have interviewed hookah users and drawn, only in the
last stage, relevant and originalconclusions,
particularly regarding dependence (2). We regret that the authors openly
present “preliminary” results or analysis of an ongoing work of this nature.
This is not possible. From the very methodological point of view of
anthropology, we are afraid this cannot be done and this is one of the
peculiarities of some social sciences.
Poland et al. have
clearly shown in the columns of this journal where the last frontiers of
tobacco control are (16). Their rare and deep analysis is valid for any country.
In the light of the debate over orientalism opened by Edward Saïd (17) to an
unexpected horizon, we scientists (particularly from the Middle East or of
Middle East origin), either from the biomedical or social science field, will
be answerable for the way we have been doing science (18). Do we make it with
the people and for the people and their health or for academic research only -
sort of Art for art’ sake ? From this perspective, we commented on Poland’
study and showed the actual similarities and dissimilarities between both the
cigarette and hookah worlds (19). So, why not take advantage of the recent
archives of this journal ?
A statement we fully
agree is : "What is unique and worrisome about the
waterpipe is its use as a substitute for cigarettes after quitting, and the
fact that the waterpipe was the trigger of relapse for some cigarette quitters.
Thus, initiation of waterpipe use can be a significant unintended consequence
of cigarette smoking cessation." Indeed, we are glad to see how our colleagues
now share the conclusions we drew more than five years ago (2, 20, 21).
About
the word “water-pipe”
We are afraid this
word is misleading and deepens the gap between scientists and the true world of
hookah users. Please refer to our critique of a paper in the columns of this
same journal (22). Indeed, we are quite sure that our colleagues will never
use, in a related study or questionnaire into Arabic, “galyûn bi-l-mâ‘
(or galyûn mâ‘î), which are, as they may know, laughable literal
translations of “water-pipe”.We are
sure they would use the words “narghile” or “shisha” (“hookah” if they were in
India or Pakistan). Indeed, they will understand that it would be funny to
imagine a naïve anthropologist asking smokers in a Syrian coffee-house: What
about your “galyûn bi-l-mâ‘” practice ?
Indeed, in this field
where tradition and the sociocultural context meet so closely with
pharmacology, it is of utmost importance to use the language the people use
then reflect this in our publications. Further to a comprehensive analysis of
the world linguistic variations and the higher observed prevalence for some of
them, we concluded that three terms are highly relevant: narghile , hookah and
shisha (2). These words can be found in any good English academic dictionary.
Shisha is now used internationally because of the global hookah craze whereas
“waterpipe”, we are afraid,is no
hypostasis. More, we have noted how this word creates bibliographic noise in
databases since it also refers to household infrastructure plumbing equipments…
Certainly the artefact is a “water-pipe” in a chemistry laboratory (9).
However, once you are in the street or in a domestic setting, it is a hookah, a
narghile, a shisha and even much more. This stresses, once more, the importance
of a scientific discipline like anthropology whose object is not the study of
folklore.
About Capacity
Building
The so-called RAM
(Research Assistance Matching) action was already advertised in the Science
journal and we had the opportunity to comment on it by emphasising the fact
that the best studies in the field of hookah smoking have been carried on in
the South with no external aid (23). For instance, who could say that Shafagog
(24), who worked with a small team in a poor country like Jordan, was lacking know-how,
ignoring international best practices or expertise ? He has actually produced
the best reference studies on cotinine/nicotine levels and an excellent other
one on CO intake in true narghile smokers.
The same applies for
Sajid (25) and his team in Pakistan, whose findings, obtained with modest
means, contributed in pushing forward research. He had this fantastic idea of
measuring CO levels according to the size of the device, the nature of the
tobacco-based mixture and even the charcoal varieties. He and his colleagues
are simply brilliants. They remained relatively unknown for a very long time
until we described their work six years ago then advertised it here and there
(2). We could follow with many other examples from the so-called South.
So, what we defend is
a capacity building project that takes into account other dimensions than the
RAM one. The objective of ours, hopefully soon carried on with the
collaboration of the prestigious University of La Sapienza, is to train
Western researchers on the specificities of the socio-cultural context of the
countries where hookah smoking seems to cause a problem for certain
authorities. Perhaps the RAM project may be of some use for cigarette smoking.
However, for narghile, our own opinion is that we definitely need not new or
modern methodologies or approaches. What we need are ideas that originate from
the local context. We have already helped dozens of researchers in this new way
of thinking and we hope to train more and more people in the future on these trailblazing
conceptual frameworks.
Kamal Chaouachi,
Researcher in Socio-Anthropology and Tobaccology
Consultant in Tobacco Control (Paris)
REFERENCES
(1) RASTAM S, WARD KD, EISSENBERG T,
MAZIAK W. Estimating the beginning of the waterpipe epidemic in Syria. BMC
Public Health 2004; 4:32.
(2) CHAOUACHI Kamal. Le
narguilé : analyse socio-anthropologique. Culture, convivialité, histoire
et tabacologie d’un mode d’usage populaire du tabac. Transdisciplinary
doctoral thesis, Université Paris X (France), 420 pages. [Engl.: "Narghile (hookah): a
Socio-Anthropological Analysis. Culture, Conviviality, History and
Tobaccologyof a Popular Tobacco Use
Mode”].
(3)
MOLIMARD R, AMRIOUI F, MARTIN C, CARLES P. Poids des mégots et contraintes
économiques [Eng. Weight
of Cigarette Butts and Economic Constraints]. La Presse Médicale 1994 ; 23 :
824-6.
(4) DE STEFANI E, OREGGIA F, RIVERO
S, FIERRO. Hand-rolled cigarette smoking and risk of cancer of the mouth,
pharynx, and larynx. Cancer
1992 (Aug 1);70(3):679-82
(5) ALOOT CB, VREDEVOE DL, BRECHT ML. Evalutation of high-risk smoking
practices used by the homeless. Cancer Nursing 1993; 16 : 1202-3
(6) KOZLOWSKI LT, MANN RE, WILKINSON DA,
POULOS CX. "Cravings"
are ambiguous: ask about urges or desires. Addict Behav. 1989;14(4):443-5.
(7) KOZLOWSKI LT, WILKINSON DA. Use and misuse of the concept of
craving by alcohol, tobacco, and drug researchers. Br J Addict. 1987 Jan;82(1):31-45.
(8) ZIELINSKI S. Smoking Machine
Test Inadequate and Confusing, But No Replacement a Decade Later. Journal
of the National Cancer Institute 2005 (Jan 5); 97 (1): 10-1.
(9)
SHIHADEH A,SALEH R. Food and
Chemical Toxicology : Polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, carbon monoxide, “tar”,
and nicotine in the mainstream smoke aerosol of the narghile water pipe. Food
and Chemical Toxicology 2005; 43(5): 655-661.
(10) WORLD HEALTH ORGANISATION.
Advisory Note: Waterpipe Tobacco Smoking: Health Effects, Research Needs and
Recommended Actions by Regulators. Tobacco Free Initiative 2005. Retrieved
15 Dec. 2005 from: www.who.int/tobacco/global_interaction/tobreg/en/
(11) MAZIAK W, WARD KD, AFIFI SOWEID
RA, EISSENBERG T. Tobacco smoking using a waterpipe: a re-emerging strain in
a global epidemic. Tobacco Control 2004; 13: 327-333.
(12) CHAOUACHI K. eLetter to the
Editor: Serious Errors in this Study. Tobacco Control 2004 (2 Dec.). A
critical analysis of the above study http://tc.bmjjournals.com/cgi/eletters/13/4/327
(13) FRENK HANAN, DAR REUVEN (book). A
Critique of Nicotine Addiction. Kluwer Academic Publishers (Boston) 2000.
(14) CHAOUACHI K. Tabacologie
du narguilé [Eng.: Tobaccology of Narghile]. Alcoologie. 1999; 21
(1/83):88-9.
(15) MOLIMARD R.. Dépendance,
la nicotine est-elle la seule responsable ?[Eng.: Dependence. Is nicotine solely
responsible ?]Soins Psychiatr 2001 (May-Jun);(214):33-5.
(16) POLAND B, FROHLICH K, HAINES
RJ, MYKHALOVSKIY E, ROCK M. SPARKS R. The social context of smoking: the
next frontier in tobacco control?. Tobacco Control 2006;15:59-63.
(17) SAID Edward (book). Orientalism. Routledge & Kegan Paul 1978 (London).
(18)
CHAOUACHI K. Culture matérielle et orientalisme. L’exemple d’une recherche
socio-anthropologique sur le narguilé. Arabica, tome LIII,2, 177-209. Koninklijke Brill NV (Leiden) 2006. [Engl.: Material Culture and Orientalism.
The Example of a Socio-Anthropological Research on Narghile](www.brill.nl )(available here
or contact author)
(19) CHAOUACHI K. Letter to the
Editor: The Social Context of Individual and Collective Smoking: Similarities
and Differences. Tobacco Control 2006 (1 April). A critical analysis of Poland’ study. http://tc.bmjjournals.com/cgi/eletters/15/1/59
(20) CHAOUACHI K. Shisha, hookah. Le narguilé
au XXIe siècle. Bref état des connaissances scientifiques. [Eng.: Narghile, Hookah in the 21st
Century: An Overview of the Scientific Knowledge]. Le Courrier des
Addictions 2004 (Oct) ; 6 (4) : 150-2. Full
English version available.
(21) CHAOUACHI Kamal. A 60 page tetralogy on narghile (hookah)
smoking and health published in Tabaccologia, the official Journal of
the Italian Society of Tobaccology: Introduction (Tabaccologia 2005; 1:
39-47); Pharmacology (2005; 3: 27-33); Health Aspects (2006;1:27-34); Prevention (forthcoming).
Includes English abstracts. www.tabaccologia.org/archivio.htm
(22)
CHAOUACHI K. Letter to the Editor: Some Misconceptions in a Good Alert Paper.
Tobacco Control2006 (18 Jan.). A critical analysis of the following
study: AFIFI-SOWEID
Rima. Lebanon: water pipe line to youth. Tobacco Control 2005;14:363-4.
(23) CHAOUACHI K. Letter
to the Editor: Arabs
Neither Need a Scientific Revolution Nor Are They a Cultural Exception. Science (eLetter, 07 March 2006). A critical analysis of the following
study: MAZIAK W. Global
voices of science. Science in the Arab world: vision of glories beyond. Science.
2005 Jun 3;308(5727):1416-8.
(24) SHAFAGOJ YA, MOHAMMED FI, HADIDI KA. Hubble-Bubble (Water Pipe)
Smoking: Levels of Nicotine and Cotinine in Plasma, Saliva and Urine.Int J Clin Pharmacol Ther 2002;
40(6):249-55.
(25)
SAJID KM, AKTHER M, MALIK GQ (1993 Sep). Carbon monoxide fractions
in cigarette and hookah. J Pak Med Assoc.; 43(9):179-82.
When I was 16-years, I lived a very rough life and found myself in
the foster-care pool. I came to live with Gloria and Bill Tuttle, and
stayed for a few months. I was a very disturbed and distraught child, and
I did not get along well with Gloria at all. (In hindsight it wasn't
because she was mean, it was because she was in charge!!!) Bill was
another story all together. He was quiet. Almost serene. He was tired a
lot...
When I was 16-years, I lived a very rough life and found myself in
the foster-care pool. I came to live with Gloria and Bill Tuttle, and
stayed for a few months. I was a very disturbed and distraught child, and
I did not get along well with Gloria at all. (In hindsight it wasn't
because she was mean, it was because she was in charge!!!) Bill was
another story all together. He was quiet. Almost serene. He was tired a
lot, and he always was in pain. He tried to hide it, but we could tell...
I remember looking forward to walks with Bill and the other girls. I was
always into medicine, and I am the type that when I don't understand
something, I make it my mission. Bill answered my questions. ALL of them!
He never tired of telling me anything I wanted to know about his illness.
He told me once he wasn't afraid to die, only of dying too soon. When I
asked him what he meant, he said that he wanted to tell everyone about his
illness and what caused it, so no one else would have to live the way he
did. He was such a good person for me at that time. Like a Grandpa. He
would walk with me and hold my hand and tell me anything I wanted to know.
I am sad that he died, but I am so proud of him for all his bravery. He
was truly an extraordinary person. I am so blessed to have spent time with
him and I hope lots of people learned from him and continue to even after
his death...
Studying the social context of cigarette smoking was acknowledged as
a pressing need in tobacco control. However, with new emerging health
concerns like the growing use of the hookah (narghile) in the world, the
social context, which bear similarities in both individual and collective
smoking, also shows great differences that need to be reviewed. This
letter introduces the reader to the specificit...
Studying the social context of cigarette smoking was acknowledged as
a pressing need in tobacco control. However, with new emerging health
concerns like the growing use of the hookah (narghile) in the world, the
social context, which bear similarities in both individual and collective
smoking, also shows great differences that need to be reviewed. This
letter introduces the reader to the specificities of collective smoking.
It is based on a comprehensive and updated review of the related
literature that includes several scientific books.
Recent efforts are geared towards the necessity of exploring further
the complexity of the social context of smoking and its consequences on
policy making. However, even if the background social theory is sometimes
the same, the analysis in the case of individual smoking (cigarette) and
collective smoking (hookah, narghile) is necessarily different in both
cases and social scientists, as well as biomedical researchers, working in
the field of tobacco control must be aware of similarities and
differences.
For instance, a team of social scientists has recently published a
study on the importance of the social context in tobacco control (1). An
emphasis, placed so far on the disease or addiction model, would have
resulted in negative consequences for the understanding of the human
smoking behaviour. In this respect, this is particularly true in the case
of fashionable hookah (narghile, shisha) smoking, our very field of
research, where the social context is completely different from the one
based on six dimensions: power relations, physicality (body in smoking),
consumption patterns, social identity, desire and pleasure, place (1).
Apart from the peculiar traditional, historical and “exotic” aspects,
we also have to deal with a collective (vs. individual) tobacco use mode
with a particular staging of the “situation” with the meaning given to
this last word by sociologist Ervin Goffman (2). In the USA, the
interviewed hookah smokers themselves strongly insist in describing their
practice as “social smoking” and, by coincidence, their peers in French-
speaking countries use most of the time and spontaneously the word
“conviviality”.
With all social scientists, we insist on the necessity of studying in
depth the social representations related to smoking. In the case of
narghile, we had to face a central one related to drug use so we decided
to proceed as follows. We very early treated this question as a priority
by publishing a core document on this aspect (3). This way, we avoided
negative interferences with our further comprehensive approach of the
other dimensions of hookah use in the world which are mainly related to
tobacco use only (4).
Then, there is another set of social representations not to be found
in the case of cigarette use: orientalism. On the one hand, this last
concept is familiar for social scientists because the corresponding issue
is considered as very serious in their field of work where a researcher
like Edward Said (5) actually touched off an epistemological revolution.
Unfortunately, on the other hand, biomedical researchers had no concrete
clue for an evaluation of the relevance of such a concept in the field of
tobacco control. So, we will limit here ourselves to cite a cogent
publication on the subject (6) that develops further an earlier analysis
(4).
As mentioned earlier, the central role of power relations, out of the
six dimensions set out for any social context regarding cigarette smoking,
was underscored (1). Notwithstanding, we wish to suggest an excellent
relatively unknown study carried on in this respect where researchers
actually showed how marginalized groups adopt unexpected strategies to
adapt to a new situation posed by rises in tobacco prices. Just to mention
one of them, they leave shorter butts which is unfortunately an extremely
hazardous behaviour (7).
Then, once again, hookah smoking, as a collective practice, is
different from cigarette use known to be individual. Both in traditional
historical or modern social settings, the practice indistinctly covers the
whole social spectrum. European travellers of the past centuries, to Asian
and African traditional societies, were often startled by this
sociological aspect and this was highlighted in their narrations (4).
According to a famous anthropologist, the sultan would share his hookah
with the street sweeper (8).
A second key dimension of the social context is physicality or the
use of body in smoking (1). However, since a hookah is much bigger in size
than a cigarette, the psycho-anthropological analysis differs in both
cases with deep consequences on the physicality of smoking. Indeed, it is
not only a question of how a cigarette is held by the smoker but how the
body adapts to a device that can reach the size of a smoker sitting on a
chair. The same Marcel Mauss, who actually created the “body techniques”
(techniques du corps) concept, defined the latter as the ways and manners
men, society by society, and in a traditional way, know how to use their
body (9).
Excellent examples are given by the many orientalist paintings, where
the narghile is omnipresent, but also in a recent article in the
biomedical literature that features a young narghile female smoker lying
by a swimming pool in Lebanon (10). The importance of the Maussian concept
was further investigated and applied by other social scientists within the
framework of what is now called “material culture” (6, 11).
Apart from the diverse dimensions of the social context, two main
ideas should guide research work in the field of tobacco control. The
first one is reflexivity defined as “maintaining a self critical attitude
and questioning taken-for-granted assumptions regarding the (political)
nature of our work and its (intended and unintended) effects, as well as
the social distribution of these effects” (1).
Such an attitude will certainly have positive practical implications
for policy makers and tobacco control activists. It may be seen as
“novel”; however, it is familiar and natural for social scientists because
this very interrogation is at the root of the anthropology discipline
itself. Indeed, a scientist like Bourdieu was often considered as an
anthropologist rather than a mere sociologist (4). In any case, this also
shows the importance of collaboration between social and biomedical
researchers.
The second important point is that the smokers’ voice would be
rather absent from most of the studies. Indeed, this is one the first
striking things any social scientist involved in tobacco control notice.
In our early work on hookah smoking, we gave the transcripts of several
unique face to face qualitative early interviews carried on in the Middle
East (4). Such a literature reveals the many details to which some of our
colleagues of the biomedical field did not pay the sufficient attention.
For instance, our findings were crucial in understanding the
specificity, particularly pharmacological and behavioural, of the
dependence process, completely different from that related to cigarette
(12). On the daily life level, we can see that the so-called “hookah
lounges” in the West already offer herbal fruit-flavoured tobacco-free
smoking mixtures to their patrons. To close this chapter, we point out
that our typology of the diverse tobacco-based smoking mixtures (tobamel,
jurâk, tumbâk, etc.) was more than a mere ethnographic classification
exercise (4, 13). For having ignored this point, the authors of recent and
widely advertised studies, misled by a misnomer used by local scientists,
actually mistook one type for another (14).
In conclusion, we invite our colleagues of both the social and
biomedical sciences field to consider other forms of smoking and pay
attention to the findings set out in this text. Some of them, like the
hookah are gaining increased public health interest because of their
dramatic development (15).
Kamal Chaouachi
REFERENCES
(1) POLAND B, FROHLICH K, HAINES RJ, MYKHALOVSKIY E, ROCK M. SPARKS
R. The social context of smoking: the next frontier in tobacco control?.
Tobacco Control 2006;15:59-63.
(2) GOFFMAN Erving (book). Les moments et leurs hommes. Seuil (Paris)
1988.
(3) CHAOUACHI Kamal (book). Le narguilé. Anthropologie d’un mode
d’usage de drogues douces [Engl.: An Anthropology of Narghile: its Use and
Soft Drugs], Ed. L'Harmattan, 1997, 262 pages.
(4) CHAOUACHI Kamal. Le narguilé : analyse socio-anthropologique.
Culture, convivialité, histoire et tabacologie d’un mode d’usage populaire
du tabac. Doctoral Thesis, Université Paris X (France), 420 pages. [Engl.:
"Narghile (hookah): a Socio-Anthropological Analysis. Culture,
Conviviality, History and Tobaccology of a Popular Tobacco Use Mode”].
(5) SAID Edward (book), L’orientalisme: L’Orient créé par l’Occident
(orig. Title : Orientalism, 1978), Seuil (Paris) 1980.
(6) CHAOUACHI Kamal. Culture matérielle et orientalisme. L’exemple
d’une recherche socio-anthropologique sur le narguilé, Arabica (Paris III
Sorbonne et EHESS), 2006. Published by Brill (The Netherlands) [Engl.:
Material Culture and Orientalism. The Example of a Socio-Anthropological
Research on Narghile], 32 pages. Soon available online at www.brill.nl
(7) MOLIMARD R, AMRIOUI F, MARTIN C, CARLES P. Poids des mégots et
contraintes économiques [Eng. Weight of Cigarette Butts and Economic
Constraints]. La Presse Médicale 1994 ; 23 : 824-6.
(8) LEVI-STRAUSS Claude (book). Tristes tropiques [Eng. Sad Tropics].
Plon (Paris) 1955.
(9) MAUSS Marcel (book). Sociologie et Anthropologie. Presses
Universitaires de France (Paris) 1968.
(10) CHAOUACHI Kamal. eLetter to the Editor: Some Misconceptions in a
Good Alert Paper. Tobacco Control (18 January 2006). A critical analysis
of the following study: AFIFI-SOWEID Rima. Lebanon: water pipe line to
youth. Tobacco Control 2005;14:363-4.
http://tc.bmjjournals.com/cgi/eletters/14/6/363-a#479
(11) WARNIER Jean-Pierre (book). Construire la culture matérielle :
l’homme qui pensait avec ses doigts. Presses Universitaires de France
(Paris) 1999.
(12) CHAOUACHI Kamal. Shisha, hookah. Le narguilé au XXIe siècle.
Bref état des connaissances scientifiques. [Eng.: Narghile, Hookah in the
21st Century: An Overview of the Scientific Knowledge]. Le Courrier des
Addictions 2004 (Oct) ; 6 (4) : 150-2.
(13) CHAOUACHI Kamal. Presentazione del narghilè e del suo uso. Guida
critica della letteratura scientifica sul narghilè (shisha, hookah,
waterpipe). Dalle origini ai giorni nostri : necessità di un approccio
interdisciplinare socio-antropologico, medico e farmacologico.
Tabaccologia (tabaccologia.org) 2005; 1: 39-47.
[Engl.: A critical review of scientific literature on narghile
(Shisha, Hookah, Waterpipe) from its origins to date: the need for a
comprehensive socio-anthropological, medical and pharmacological
approach]. A tetralogy on all aspects of hookah smoking (further issues on
Pharmacology, Pathologies and Public Health). All issues available at
www.tabaccologia.org and www.tabaccologia.org/archivio.htm)
(14) Among others: NATTO S, BALJOON M, BERGSTROM J. Tobacco Smoking
and Periodontal Health in a Saudi Arabian Population. Journal of
Periodontology 2005; 76 (11): 1919-26.
(15) CHAOUACHI Kamal. The Recent Development of Hookah Use in the
World : a Serious Epidemic or just a Passing Fad ? The Need for a Socio-
Anthropological and Medical Approach. IFSSH (International Forum for
Social Sciences and Health), World Congress “Health Challenges of the
Third Millenium”. Istanbul, 21-26 Aug. 2005. Published by Yeditepe
University, Dept. of Anthropology, Aug. 2005, tome I, pp. 360-1.
NOTE: A full English version or at least an official English
abstract are available for most of the above cited references.
Less Harmful cigarettes do exist, but the majority of the smoking
public is unaware that they are available. Isn't it about time that our
government establish an agency that would regulate all tobacco products? I
have recently been made aware of a new company that makes a less harmful
cigarette. The companies name is Wellstone Filters(lowertar.com), and they
have a developed a special cigarette filter that is patented and...
Less Harmful cigarettes do exist, but the majority of the smoking
public is unaware that they are available. Isn't it about time that our
government establish an agency that would regulate all tobacco products? I
have recently been made aware of a new company that makes a less harmful
cigarette. The companies name is Wellstone Filters(lowertar.com), and they
have a developed a special cigarette filter that is patented and FTC
tested that screens out up to 95% of all carcinogens in cigarette smoke.
It looks and acts just like a regular cigarette filter. Why don't all
cigarettes manufactures use these or similar filters to provide a less
harmful cigarette?
If the FDA would regulate tobacco, the public could benefit from many new
less harmful products. The citizens of our great free country have every
right to enjoy a relaxing smoke, and why not make them less harmful! The
anti smoking public would be better served if they would focus there
energy toward getting our governmental agencies to demand from the tobacco
companies less harmful tobacco products! It could all begin with the FDA
regulating tobacco products!
Shisha vs. “Water-pipe” : The Question of a Unifying Term
...Dear Editor,
This is to comment on the following recently published eletter:
The issue of nomenclature: Wasim Maziak (17 June 2006)
In a dictionary search for Hookah, Hubble-bubble, Narghile, Arghile, Water-pipe and Shisha, the Oxford Paperback Dictionary [1] defines Hookah as an oriental tobacco pipe with a long tube passing through a glass container that cools the smoke as it is drawn thr...
I thank the authors of letters regarding our published work (Ward et al, 2006) on their useful remarks. It is self-understandable that no one uses the world waterpipe when asking the public about this tobacco use method, but use the local word for it. The same way that we never ask the public about ischemic heart disease but use this term extensively in research papers about this problem. It is also understandable that t...
Dear Editor,
This is to comment on the following recently published eletter:
Chaouachi K: Syria, Lebanon, Tobacco Research in General and Narghile (Hookah, Shisha) Smoking in Particular. TC Online 8 June 2006.
I completely agree with the statement that Shisha is now used internationally because of the global hookah craze whereas “waterpipe” is no hypostasis and adhere to the notice that this wo...
Being a son of a famous well-qualified owner of a café shop, I have been, since the early days of my perception, in direct contact with Goza and Shisha smokers. Goza is a modified form of Shisha. It has its head, body, water-container, and hose [1]. However, Goza has no mouth-piece separated from the hose and no disposable plastic mouth-piece is served or commonly used. Yet, the water-container of Goza was and still is ma...
Dear Editor,
This is to comment on the following recently published study:...
When I was 16-years, I lived a very rough life and found myself in the foster-care pool. I came to live with Gloria and Bill Tuttle, and stayed for a few months. I was a very disturbed and distraught child, and I did not get along well with Gloria at all. (In hindsight it wasn't because she was mean, it was because she was in charge!!!) Bill was another story all together. He was quiet. Almost serene. He was tired a lot...
Would sildenafil (Viagra) or tadanafil (Cialis) ameliorate ED in men who smoke? Was use of these medications asked about in the study?
Norbert Hirschhorn MD
Dear Editor,
Studying the social context of cigarette smoking was acknowledged as a pressing need in tobacco control. However, with new emerging health concerns like the growing use of the hookah (narghile) in the world, the social context, which bear similarities in both individual and collective smoking, also shows great differences that need to be reviewed. This letter introduces the reader to the specificit...
Less Harmful cigarettes do exist, but the majority of the smoking public is unaware that they are available. Isn't it about time that our government establish an agency that would regulate all tobacco products? I have recently been made aware of a new company that makes a less harmful cigarette. The companies name is Wellstone Filters(lowertar.com), and they have a developed a special cigarette filter that is patented and...
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