Also, most hookah places don’t serve alcohol, making it striking destination for people under twenty- one years. These are some of the reasons that I personally encountered in my experience with the hookah. Although it seems like everything opposes what I’ve said about banning it, my intention is still persistent.
In 2012, the Journal of Environmental and Public Health published an article “Use of Emerging Tobacco Products in the United States”; a national survey was conducted among 2400 young adults to determine emerging tobacco use in which, “surprisingly” hookah smoke took the lead. The non-daily smokers smoked hookah twenty five percent more than the daily cigarette smokers or non-smokers. The author also stated that, “poly tobacco use among these non daily smokers may also increase levels of nicotine exposure and risk of persistent tobacco dependence relative to the exclusive use of cigarettes”. I find this less concerning for people who don’t smoke cigarette than who do smoke cigarette on a regular basis. But nevertheless, a typical hookah session can last up to an hour or more which equals the amount of hundred cigarettes inhaled. The biggest misconception is that smoking hookah is somehow less harmful than smoking cigarettes because it is “filtered” through water pipes. The World Health Organization found that water in hookahs filters out less than five percent of the nicotine. In addition, hookah smoke contains tar, heavy metals, and other cancer causing chemicals.