Perception Of Prescription Drug Abuse Among Medical Students

Authors

  • Akshit Mathur
  • Aditya Pratap Singh Rajawat
  • Sania Fatima Khan
  • Amol Ranjan
  • Truptimayee Parida
  • Atulya Vedanta Mishra
  • Sapna Singh
  • Rupesh Dinakar Dalavi
  • Hemant Kumar Garg
  • Brij Mohan

Keywords:

Prescription drug abuse, medical students, Pharmacovigilance, academic stress, ethical prescribing

Abstract

Prescription drug abuse is a rising public health challenge, especially among populations with early exposure to pharmacological education. This cross-sectional study evaluated perceptions, attitudes, and self-reported practices related to prescription drug misuse among 100 medical students from three tertiary institutions in India. A validated 24-item Likert-scale questionnaire (Cronbach’s α = 0.84) revealed moderate awareness but significant misconceptions regarding non-medical use of prescription drugs. Misuse was frequently rationalized under academic stress and cognitive performance pressure. Statistical analysis using chi-square and logistic regression showed a significant association between perceived safety and self-use (χ² = 14.8, p < 0.001), with high academic stress emerging as a key predictor (OR = 1.73, 95% CI: 1.2–2.4). Findings call for integrated pharmacovigilance, ethics modules, and mental health support in the medical curriculum

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Published

2025-07-18

How to Cite

1.
Mathur A, Singh Rajawat AP, Khan SF, Ranjan A, Parida T, Mishra AV, Singh S, Dalavi RD, Kumar Garg H, Mohan B. Perception Of Prescription Drug Abuse Among Medical Students. J Neonatal Surg [Internet]. 2025Jul.18 [cited 2025Sep.22];14(32S):5797-800. Available from: https://jneonatalsurg.com/index.php/jns/article/view/8378