Michigan health leaders target growing hookah use
Source: www.detnews.com Author: Kim Kozlowski Everybody that Rola Rayes knows smokes the ornate water pipe that has become popular in Metro Detroit and around the world. But no one realizes the dangers linked to the pipe, known here as a hookah, because it is so ingrained in her Middle Eastern culture. Rayes, 17, has been trying to convince her family and friends about the personal health risks of water pipe smoke, and second-hand smoke to others. "It's a very big problem," said Rayes, a Dearborn resident who moved here in 2005 from Lebanon. "This is affecting me, it is affecting my brothers and it is affecting them." Rayes joined state and local health leaders Thursday to strategize ways to tackle a growing state problem of hookah smoking. They are trying to stop the use of hookah pipes as research about the risks continues to mount. For example, smoking the hookah for an hour can yield as much smoke as 100 or more cigarettes. It contains significantly more nicotine and carbon monoxide than cigarette smoke, and use by pregnant woman can contribute to low birth weights, according to recent studies. "It's spread and is being used widely among different age groups and across ethnicities," said Dinah Ayna, coordinator of the forum, organized by the Arab Community Center for Economic and Social Services. No research into hookah use existed before 2002, according to Wasim Maziak, director of the Syrian Center for Tobacco Studies in the Middle East. But his center alone has [...]