| Literature DB >> 23958628 |
Wasim Maziak1, Rima Nakkash2, Raed Bahelah3, Abdullatif Husseini2, Nadia Fanous2, Thomas Eissenberg2.
Abstract
The Arab world is comprised of 22 countries with a combined population of ∼360 million. The region is still at the initial stages of the tobacco epidemic, where it is expected to witness an increase in smoking levels and mounting tobacco-related morbidity and mortality in the future. Still, the bleak outlook of the tobacco epidemic in the Arab world continues to be faced with complacency in the form of underutilization of surveillance systems to monitor the tobacco epidemic and prioritize action, and failure to implement and enforce effective policies to curb the tobacco epidemic. Understandably, the focus on the Arab world carries the risk of trying to generalize to such a diverse group of countries at different level of economic and political development. Yet, tobacco control in the Arab world faces some shared patterns and common challenges that need to be addressed to advance its cause in this region. In addition, forces that promote tobacco use, such as the tobacco industry, and trends in tobacco use, such as the emerging waterpipe epidemic tend to coalesce around some shared cultural and socio-political features of this region. Generally, available data from Arab countries point at three major trends in the tobacco epidemic: (1) high prevalence of cigarette smoking among Arab men compared with women; (2) the re-emergence of waterpipe (also known as hookah, narghile, shisha, arghile) smoking as a major tobacco use method, especially among youth and (3) the failure of policy to provide an adequate response to the tobacco epidemic. In this review, we will discuss these trends, factors contributing to them, and the way forward for tobacco control in this unstable region. Published by Oxford University Press in association with The London School of Hygiene and Tropical MedicineEntities:
Keywords: Arab world; hookah; policy; tobacco industry; waterpipe
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23958628 PMCID: PMC4153301 DOI: 10.1093/heapol/czt055
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Health Policy Plan ISSN: 0268-1080 Impact factor: 3.344