“…Older students were more likely to be current smokers, particularly shisha smokers, while male students were more likely to be cigarette, shisha, or midwakh smokers or e-cigarette/ENDs users than female students. Compared to regional estimates, the prevalence of smoking (15.1%) among university students in the UAE in this study was lower than that reported among college students in Oman (23.5%) [28], undergraduate students in Syria (51.4%) [29], and male and female university students in Yemen (36.3% and 28.0%, respectively), Bahrain (27.0% vs. 4.2%, respectively), Tunisia (38.4% and 3.4%, respectively), Egypt (61.2% and 18.9%, respectively), Palestine (52.7% and 16.5%, respectively), and Jordan (54.3% and 11.1%, respectively) [30]. The prevalence of cigarettes (5.5%) and shisha (5.5%) smoking among university students in the UAE was far lower than that reported among UAE residents generally (37.7%) in 2018 [2], adolescents in Qatar (9.8%) [31], Libya (cigarettes: 80.2%) [32], Syria (cigarettes: 23.8%, shisha: 18.0%) [29], Jordan (cigarettes: 80.0%) [33], Saudi Arabia (cigarettes: 70.7%, shisha: 36.4-36.3%) [34,35], and Lebanon (shisha: 29.5%) [36], but slightly higher than the reported shisha smoking among university students in Bahrain (2.0%) and similar to the previously reported shisha smoking in Yemen (5.0%) [30] and among university students in Sharjah, UAE in 2005 (5.6%) [37].…”