| Literature DB >> 30349282 |
Georgios Papazisis1, Spyridon Siafis1, Ioannis Tsakiridis1, Ioannis Koulas1, Themistoklis Dagklis1, Dimitrios Kouvelas1.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Cannabis is reported to be the most common illicit substance used among medical students; however, the number of related studies is limited and their results are not systematically reviewed. The aim of our study was to analyze the prevalence of lifetime and current use of cannabis among medical students worldwide.Entities:
Keywords: Cannabis; medical students; prevalence
Year: 2018 PMID: 30349282 PMCID: PMC6194916 DOI: 10.1177/1178221818805977
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Subst Abuse ISSN: 1178-2218
Figure 1.PRISMA flowchart.
Studies of cannabis use among medical students worldwide.
| Study | Country | Participants | Study year | Age | Gender of users (M/F) | Lifetime use, % | Past-year use, % | Past-month use, % | Quality (grade) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Ihezue[ | Nigeria | 728 | 2nd-6th | 22.6 ± 2.36 | M/F: 22/1 | ns | ns | 3.1%, n = 23 | C |
| James et al. 2013[ | Nigeria | 200 | 5th | 24.1 ± 2.45 | ns | 10.5%, n = 21 | ns | 5%, n = 10 | C |
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| Ali and Vankar[ | India | 215 | 1st, 2nd, 6th | 19.7 | M/F: 2/0 | 0.93%, n = 2 | ns | 0 | C |
| Jodati et al[ | Iran | 173 | ns | 21.3 | ns | ns | 5.7%, n = 10 | ns | C |
| Rai et al[ | India | 2135 | 1st-6th | 20.5 | M/F: 129/12 | 6.0%, n = 141 | ns | 1.4%, n = 32 | C |
| Budhathoki et al[ | Nepal | 510 | 3rd | 22.5 | M/F: 62/5 | 13.1%, n = 67 | ns | ns | C |
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| Lambert Passos et al[ | Brazil | 1054 | 1st-6th | 21.1 ± 3.9 | M/F: 124/94 | 20.9%, n = 218 | ns | 5.5%, n = 59 | C |
| Di Pietro et al[ | Brazil | 456 | 1st-6th | 21.12 ± 2.4 | ns | ns | ns | 15%, n = 68 | C |
| Boniatti et al[ | Brazil | 183 | 1st-6th | 22.5 ± 2.4 | M/F: 31/26 | 31.1%, n = 57 | 13.6%, n = 25 | 7.6%, n = 14 | C |
| Buchanan and Pillon[ | Honduras | 260 | 4th-5th | 22.5 | ns | ns | 3.8%, n = 10 | 1.9%, n = 5 | C |
| Carvalho et al[ | Brazil | 465 | 1st-6th | 21.5 | ns | 14.4%, n = 67 | 4.5%, n = 21 | ns | C |
| Da Silveira et al[ | Brazil | 456 | 1st-6th | 21 | M/F: 63/12 | ns | 16.4%, n = 75 | ns | C |
| De Oliveira et al[ | Brazil | 209 | 6th | 22 | M/F: 34/17 | 24.3%, n = 51 | 14.3%, n = 30 | 10.5%, n = 22 | C |
| Petroianu et al[ | Brazil | 332 | 1st-6th | 23 | M/F: 37/16 | ns | 16%, n = 53 | ns | C |
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| McKay et al[ | United Kingdom | 749 | 1st-4th | 20 | M/F: 80/20 | 13.4%, n = 100 | ns | 3.6%, n = 27 | C |
| Laporte et al[ | Spain | 808 | 1st-6th | ns | M/F: 45/19 | 7.9%, n = 64 | ns | 3.8%, n = 31 | C |
| Rodriguez et al. 1986[ | Spain | 2308 | ns | ns | M/F: 285/193 | 20.7%, n = 478 | ns | ns | C |
| Ashton and Kamali[ | United Kingdom | 186 M/F: 76/109 | ns | 20.4 ± 1.8 | M/F: 26/30 | 30.3%, n = 56 | ns | ns | C |
| Webb et al[ | United Kingdom | 750 | 2nd | ns | M/F: 180/165 | 46%, n = 345 | ns | 10%, n = 75 | C |
| Newbury-Birch et al[ | United Kingdom | 194 | 1st | 18.8 ± 2.1 | M/F:32/54 | 44.3%, n = 86 | ns | 19%, n = 37 | C |
| Pickard et al[ | United Kingdom | 136 | 2nd | ns | M/F: 11/30 | 30.1%, n = 41 | ns | ns | C |
| Newbury-Birch et al[ | United Kingdom | 110 | 6th | ns | M/F: 22/50 | 65.5%, n = 72 | ns | 23.6%, n = 26 | C |
| Trkulja et al[ | Croatia | 775 | 1st-6th | 18-24 | M/F: 129/144 | 61.5%, n = 273 | ns | ns | C |
| Gignon et al[ | France | 171 | 2nd-6th | 22.1 ± 1.7 | ns | ns | 77%, n = 131 | 33%, n = 56 | C |
| Vujcic et al[ | Serbia | 418 | 4th | 22.46 ± 1.12 | M/F: 63/83 | 34.9%, n = 146 | ns | ns | C |
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| Solursh et al[ | USA | 234 | 3rd-Final | ns | ns | 20.5%, n = 48 | 16.6%, n = 39 | 11.9%, n = 28 | C |
| Lipp et al[ | USA | 1063 | ns | ns | ns | 52%, n = 550 | ns | 30.9%, n = 328 | C |
| Rochford et al[ | USA | 134 | 1st | 22 | ns | 72%, n = 96 | ns | ns | C |
| Kory and Crandall[ | USA | 463 | 1st-Final | 23.6 | ns | 70%, n = 302 | ns | 27.4%, n = 127 | C |
| McAuliffe et al[ | USA | 381 | 1st-Final | 25 | ns | 18.9%, n = 72 | 5.77%, n = 22 | 3.1%, n = 12 | C |
| Conard et al[ | USA | 589 | 4th | 27.6 | ns | 74%, n = 436 | 31.9%, n = 188 | 16.9%, n = 100 | C |
| Schwartz et al. 1990[ | USA | 263 | 2nd-3rd | ns | ns | 48.3%, n = 127 | 19%, n = 50 | 5.3%, n = 14 | C |
| Croen et al[ | USA | 139 | 3rd | <22 | ns | ns | 21.6%, n = 30 | ns | C |
| Choi et al[ | USA | 301 | 1st-Final | ns | ns | ns | ns | 1.3%, n = 4 | C |
| Zhou et al[ | USA | 431 | 1st-Final | 25 | ns | 31.5%, n = 136 | 12.2%, n = 53 | 9%, n = 39 | C |
| Chan et al[ | USA | 236 | 1st-Final | 25-29 | ns | 33.3%, n = 127 | ns | ns | C |
| Merlo et al[ | USA | 862 | 1st-Final | ns | M/F: 190/224 | 46.8%, n = 414 | ns | 4.1%, n = 36 | C |
| Ayala et al[ | USA | 855 | 1st-Final | 25.6 ± 3.30 | ns | ns | 26.2%, n = 224 | 11.7% n = 100 | C |
When available, age is displayed with average and its standard deviation. M, male; F, female; ns, data not stated).
Figure 2.Forest plot of (A) lifetime, (B) past-year, and (C) past-month cannabis use among medical students, stratified by continent. “Events” refer to the number of cannabis users, and “Total” refers to the sample size of each study. Black squares represent the point estimate of prevalence of each study. The area of the square is proportional to the percent weight of the study, which contributes to the pooled prevalence (calculated using the inverse variance method). Horizontal lines show 95% confidence intervals. The diamond shows the pooled results and its width the 95% confidence interval. Between-study heterogeneity is represented by I2. The vertical dashed line indicates the overall pooled prevalence.
Figure 3.Forest plot of pooled relative risk for sex of medical students for cannabis use by continent. Male medical students are referred as the experimental group and female students as the control group. The “Events” refer to the number of cannabis users, and “Total” refers the total number of males or females of the study. Black squares represent the relative risk of each study. The area of the square is proportional to weight of the study, which contributes to the pooled relative risk (calculated using the Mantel-Haenszel method). Horizontal lines show 95% confidence intervals. The diamond shows the pooled results and its width the 95% confidence interval. Between-study heterogeneity is represented by I2. The vertical dashed line indicates the overall pooled relative risk.