Cigarettes Online Store
Cigarettes online  |  Tell a Friend   Shopping Cart
Disclaimer Policy                    Contact Us: support@cigarettes-online.biz
All 50 states? - YES!!!

Purchase reporting? - NO!!!
HomeContact UsFAQStore PoliciesOrder Status
Your satisfaction is guaranted!!!
     Available Products
 Bond cigarette
 Camel cigarette
 Capri cigarette
 Chesterfield cigarette
 Davidoff cigarette
 Dubliss cigarette
 Dunhill cigarette
 Gauloises cigarette
 Gitanes cigarette
 Kent cigarette
 L&M cigarette
 Lucky Strike cigarette
 Marlboro cigarette
 Monte Carlo cigarette
 More cigarette
 Muratti cigarette
 Next cigarette
 Pall Mall cigarette
 Parliament cigarette
 Viceroy cigarette
 Virginia cigarette
 Vogue cigarette
 West cigarette
 Winston cigarette
 Discontinued Products
 555 cigarette
 Alliance cigarette
 American Spirit cigarette
 Basic cigarette
 Boss cigarette
 Dallas cigarette
 Delta cigarette
 Epique cigarette
 Esse cigarette
 Eve cigarette
 Karelia cigarette
 Kool cigarette
 Magna cigarette
 Marathon cigarette
 Mild Seven cigarette
 Misty cigarette
 Newport cigarette
 Peter I cigarette
 President cigarette
 R1 cigarette
 Rothmans cigarette
 Russian Style cigarette
 Salem cigarette
 Samurai cigarette
 Sobranie cigarette
 Sovereign cigarette
 Style cigarette

Tobacco News and Interesting Information

Category:
  Health/Science
Region:
  Canada

HOOKAH SMOKING MAY POSE SAME RISK AS CIGARETTES
Source: CTV.ca
Date: 29-May-2007


GENEVA -- Smoking from a water pipe may pose the same health risks as cigarettes, the World Health Organization said Tuesday, adding that there's a need for more research into the link between hookahs and a number of fatal illnesses.

The hookah, used for centuries in North Africa, the Middle East and Central and South Asia, has become increasingly popular in the West, particularly among college students and young adults. Hookah bars have sprung up in cities across the United States, and groups of people often visit them to relax and talk while smoking from the water pipes.

WHO, however, warned that using the water pipe to smoke tobacco is "not a safe alternative to cigarette smoking.'' In a seven-page document on the practice, the UN health agency said the rising popularity of hookahs is partly due to "unfounded assumptions'' of safety and misleading commercial marketing.

"Contrary to ancient lore and popular belief, the smoke that emerges from a water pipe contains numerous toxicants known to cause lung cancer, heart disease and other diseases,'' said WHO, which also issued a 50-page report Tuesday urging all countries to ban smoking in public buildings.

WHO warned that using water pipes to consume shisha -- a mixture of tobacco, molasses and fruit flavours -- usually exposes a person to more smoke over a longer period of time than do cigarettes.

The health agency said a person can inhale more than 100 times more smoke in a hookah session than in a single cigarette. By delivering nicotine, the water pipe can cause addiction. Preliminary research also indicates that hookah smoking may involve "some unique health risks,'' WHO said.

A hookah typically consists of a bowl connected to a vase of water with a long tube and mouthpiece. The tobacco sits inside the bowl with a layer of foil and a hot coal on top. The shisha is not lit, instead heated by the charcoal, which users say produces a vapour different from smoke.

"None of the accessories have been demonstrated to reduce smokers' exposure to toxins or risk of tobacco-related disease and death,'' WHO said.

While further research is required, the health body said those exposed to second-hand hookah smoke appeared to be at risk of the same diseases as those exposed to cigarettes. WHO warned that hookah smoke could also increase the risk of adverse effects during pregnancy.

Also Tuesday, WHO issued its strongest policy recommendations yet for controlling tobacco use, urging all countries to ban smoking at indoor workplaces and in public buildings.

Tobacco use is the world's leading cause of preventable death, accounting for 10 per cent of adult fatalities, according to WHO. It is responsible for 5.4 million deaths each year, a figure that is expected to rise to 8.3 million by 2030, the agency says.

Increasing numbers of non-smokers will also die unless governments take action, WHO said. It said governments of both rich and poor countries should declare all public indoor places smoke-free, by passing laws and actively enforcing measures to ensure that "everyone has a right to breathe clean air, free from tobacco smoke."

Copyright © www.cigarettes-online.biz, 2006-2010. All Rights Reserved