Author Interviews, CHEST, Pulmonary Disease, Smoking / 23.02.2014
COPD: Risk from Chinese WaterPipe Smoking
MedicalResearch.com Interview with:
Chunxue Bai, MD & PhD
Director, Shanghai Respiratory Research Institute
Professor of Medicine, Chairman, Shanghai Leading academic discipline
Chair, Chinese Alliance against Lung Cancer
MedicalResearch.com: What are the main findings of the study?
Dr. Bai: Recently, we found a dilemma phenomenon that the incidence of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and lung cancer has remained high in southwest China despite the 1976 National Stove Improvement Program for indoor air quality.
However, little information is known to the public about a regional endemic related to Chinese waterpipe smoking, which is different from the Arabic waterpipe. The Chinese waterpipe has been traditionally misconceived as less harmful for three reasons:
- (1) no charcoal was used in contrast to the Arabic waterpipe,
- (2) tobacco smoke passed through the water as opposed to cigarette smoking and
- (3) smoking through a large volume waterpipe could “improve lung function.”