| Literature DB >> 30262985 |
Georgios Papazisis1, Ioannis Tsakiridis1, Spyridon Siafis1.
Abstract
Nonmedical use of prescription medications is a growing health problem including not only the opioid painkiller overdose epidemic but also benzodiazepine and stimulants misuse. Medical students express considerable high percentages of prescription drug misuse but also of illicit drug use, with cannabis being the frequently used illicit drug. We report the final results of a cross-sectional study among medical students that examined prevalence and motivation for use and suggest that medical students display similar patterns of misuse, for both licit and illicit drugs, to other students. Furthermore, a correlation was found between illicit drugs use with tranquilizers misuse and between smoking and alcohol misuse with opioids, sleeping drugs, and stimulants use. Considering that substance use during medical school affects students' personal and professional lives and has potential consequences for their patients, further studies are needed to elucidate the prevalence but also the motivation for that use.Entities:
Keywords: Medical students; cannabis; illicit drugs; nonmedical use of prescription drugs; prevalence
Year: 2018 PMID: 30262985 PMCID: PMC6149012 DOI: 10.1177/1178221818802298
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Subst Abuse ISSN: 1178-2218
Relationship between the use of tobacco, alcohol, and illicit drugs with the lifetime prevalence of prescription medications use.
| Opioid painkillers | Tranquilizers | Sleeping med | Stimulants | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| OR | OR | OR | OR | OR | OR | OR | OR | |
| Smoking | 1.872 | — | 4.541 | |||||
| Binge drinking | 1.356 | — | 1.931 | — | 1.563 | — | 1.836 | |
| CAGE | 0.941 | — | 2.053 | — | ||||
| Illicit drugs’ use | 0.879 | — | 1.276 | — | 8.814 | |||
Alcohol misuse was expressed as positive screening using the CAGE scale or binge drinking. The relationship was investigated with univariate analysis and multivariate logistic regression in terms of odds ratio (OR) and 95% confidence intervals (CI). univariate analysis: painkillers’ use was correlated with smoking (p=0.001), tranquilizers lifetime use with illicit drugs’ use (p=0.002), sleeping drugs’ use with smoking (p=0.021) and CAGE (p=0.011) and stimulants’ use with binge drinking (p=0.007), smoking(p<0.001), illicit drugs’ use(p<0.001) and CAGE (p<0.001). multivariate analysis: painkillers’ use was correlated with smoking (p=0.001), tranquilizers lifetime use with illicit drugs’ use (p=0.002), sleeping drugs’ use with smoking (p=0.036) and CAGE (p=0.023) and stimulants’ use with CAGE (p=0.003).