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"It's nice to just be": A qualitative study on the meaning-imbued reality of waterpipe smoking among young adults in Sweden.

Britta PeltersMaria Rosaria Galanti
Published in: Nordisk alkohol- & narkotikatidskrift : NAT (2023)
Background and aims: Waterpipe smoking is regarded as a burgeoning public health problem due to its popularity among young adults. This study aims to understand the meaning-imbued reality of waterpipe smoking for young adults in Sweden. Method: Data from 18 individual interviews with ethnically diverse Swedish young adults were analysed using inductive latent-level qualitative content analysis. Results: The youth's experience of waterpipe smoking shows different dimensions (time, space, fun, community) that construct the practice of waterpipe smoking as a closed bubble characterised by harmlessness, cosiness and freedom to develop an adult self in the waterpipe group. The bubble provides a breathing space and timeout in everyday life, fuelled by an understanding of the hookah as hazard-free and liberating. A variety of control mechanisms are used to defend the bubble's constructed harmlessness, proving responsibility by applying practice-, communication- and Othering-oriented means. Conclusion: The study enhances the understanding of waterpipe smoking by highlighting its community- and self-forming meaning in a combined focus on ritualistic and symbolic qualities. For young adults, waterpipe smoking combines potentially beneficial and detrimental impacts on health. This complex situation requires a dialogical - rather than a traditional - approach to prevention that negotiates the risk landscape faced by young adults.
Keyphrases
  • young adults
  • smoking cessation
  • public health
  • healthcare
  • childhood cancer
  • mental health
  • primary care
  • systematic review
  • machine learning
  • single cell
  • data analysis