Comparison of self-medication practices with analgesics among undergraduate medical and paramedical students of a tertiary care teaching institute in Central India - A questionnaire-based study
Inappropriate self-medication can increase chances of adverse drug reactions, disease aggravation, or drug interactions. Analgesics are most commonly used as self-medication. The aim of this study was to evaluate and compare analgesic self-medication practices among medical and paramedical undergrad...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of Education and Health Promotion 2020, Vol.9 (1), p.309-309 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Inappropriate self-medication can increase chances of adverse drug reactions, disease aggravation, or drug interactions. Analgesics are most commonly used as self-medication.
The aim of this study was to evaluate and compare analgesic self-medication practices among medical and paramedical undergraduate students of a tertiary care teaching institute in Central India.
A cross-sectional, observational study was conducted in 216 undergraduate medical (MBBS and BDS) and paramedical (occupational therapy/physiotherapy and BSc nursing) students. A predesigned, self-developed, semi-structured questionnaire was used.
The Chi-square test was used for testing statistical significance.
The overall prevalence of self-medication with analgesics was 83.33%. Self-medication was significantly high among medical students as compared to paramedical students (
= 0.003). Significantly more medical students were aware about adverse drug reactions of analgesics as compared to paramedical students (
= 0.019). The most common source of information about drugs was previous prescription (58.33%), followed by media including the Internet (53.70%). The most dominant symptom compelling self-medication was found to be muscular pain (42.12%), followed by headache (36.57%). 54.16% of the students revealed that self-medication provides quick relief from pain. The most commonly used analgesic was paracetamol (82.40%), followed by diclofenac (22.68%). A significant number of paramedical students do not know exactly what precautions should be taken while taking analgesics (
= 0.002).
Medical students are more indulged in self-medication practices with analgesics. Paramedical students need to be educated regarding safe use of analgesics. |
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ISSN: | 2277-9531 2319-6440 |
DOI: | 10.4103/jehp.jehp_378_20 |