Characteristics of Waterpipe Smokers Who Are Willing to Quit: Population-Based Findings from Syria.
Article
Ward, Kenneth D, Mukhopadhyay, Ayesha, Lugemwa, Tony et al. (2024). Characteristics of Waterpipe Smokers Who Are Willing to Quit: Population-Based Findings from Syria.
. 16(3), 163-172. 10.34172/ahj.1526
Ward, Kenneth D, Mukhopadhyay, Ayesha, Lugemwa, Tony et al. (2024). Characteristics of Waterpipe Smokers Who Are Willing to Quit: Population-Based Findings from Syria.
. 16(3), 163-172. 10.34172/ahj.1526
Many waterpipe users are willing to quit but have difficulty doing so. Little is known about the characteristics of those who are willing to quit.
Methods
Using two-stage cluster sampling, we conducted a secondary analysis of a population-based household survey of 2038 adults in Aleppo, Syria. We examined the prevalence of, and reasons for, willingness to quit and compared users who were willing with those were not willing to quit based on sociodemographic, psychosocial, tobacco-related, and health-related characteristics.
Findings
Twelve percent of adults smoked waterpipe (n=248), of these, 56% were willing to quit, and 25% had made a quit attempt in the past year. Friends/socializing (69%) and boredom/free time (16%) were the most reported obstacles to quitting. Those who were willing to quit walked more frequently (odds ratio [OR]=1.85; 95% confidence interval [CI]=1.24-2.77), ate less fruit (OR=0.56; CI=0.42-0.73), and were more likely to experience sneezing/blocked nose (OR=2.55, CI=1.22-5.34). Compared to users who did not also smoke cigarettes, dual users who were willing to quit cigarettes were more likely to be willing to quit waterpipe (OR=2.32; CI=1.24-4.34), whereas dual users who were not willing to quit cigarettes were less likely to be willing to quit waterpipe (OR=0.24; CI=0.10-0.58).
Conclusion
Many waterpipe users are willing to quit and perceive the loss of positive social functions as a major obstacle. Very few sociodemographic, tobacco-related, psychosocial, or health-related characteristics are associated with willingness to quit. However, quitting efforts may benefit from targeting dual users who are motivated to quit using all tobacco products.