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Prevalence and correlates of alcohol and tobacco consumption among research scholars: evidence from a cross-sectional survey of three Indian universities

Prevalence and correlates of alcohol and tobacco consumption among research scholars: evidence from a cross-sectional survey of three Indian universities
Prevalence and correlates of alcohol and tobacco consumption among research scholars: evidence from a cross-sectional survey of three Indian universities

Purpose: alcohol and tobacco consumption are significant public health concerns and considered some of the riskiest behaviors among students. Despite strong indications of heavy consumption of these substances, certain sections of the student population remain unexplored regarding their consumption patterns and associated factors, including research scholars pursuing Doctor of Philosophy degrees. This study aims to explore the patterns and correlations of consumption of alcohol and tobacco among doctoral students in three Indian universities.

Design/methodology/approach: a cross-sectional study was conducted on a total of 530 scholars from three central universities, Aligarh Muslim University, Banaras Hindu University and Jawahar Lal Nehru University, and focused on two substances (alcohol and tobacco) frequently used by students in India. Bi-variate analysis and penalized logistic regressions were applied to analyse the prevalence and associated factors of alcohol, smoking and smokeless tobacco among doctoral students.

Findings: tobacco consumption was observed to be the dominant form of substance use among doctoral students. Findings revealed that 34% of scholars smoked and 25% consumed smokeless tobacco daily and around 14% consumed alcohol at least once a week. Major significant correlates of substance consumption among scholars were found to be gender, religion, parental mortality, dissatisfaction with academic performance and stress about future career/employment. Significant variation in substance use patterns was observed among universities.

Originality/value: this study provides first-hand evidence on substance use patterns and the correlates among doctoral students in three Indian universities. Findings indicate the implementation of specific intervention programs for mental health and counselling for this section of students to prevent substance use addiction would be beneficial.

Alcohol, Penalized logistic regression, Smoking, Tobacco, University students
2752-6739
140-155
Usman, Mohd
dbe278e5-7683-438d-85e1-0327b0b89933
Anand, Enu
f109ea59-034d-486d-8394-87c8f8e9bec9
Akhtar, Saddaf Naaz
aa7e6bda-4317-4905-bbde-1582a6a7bf58
Umenthala, Srikanth Reddy
256e6b65-39b7-4ca0-b3d0-fbf454bd7cdc
Anwar, Tarique
ca88dacd-82f9-43f0-b5df-5599e1b489cf
Unisa, Sayeed
b56b72b6-f5e3-4cc7-b781-e1b24c49f1c8
Usman, Mohd
dbe278e5-7683-438d-85e1-0327b0b89933
Anand, Enu
f109ea59-034d-486d-8394-87c8f8e9bec9
Akhtar, Saddaf Naaz
aa7e6bda-4317-4905-bbde-1582a6a7bf58
Umenthala, Srikanth Reddy
256e6b65-39b7-4ca0-b3d0-fbf454bd7cdc
Anwar, Tarique
ca88dacd-82f9-43f0-b5df-5599e1b489cf
Unisa, Sayeed
b56b72b6-f5e3-4cc7-b781-e1b24c49f1c8

Usman, Mohd, Anand, Enu, Akhtar, Saddaf Naaz, Umenthala, Srikanth Reddy, Anwar, Tarique and Unisa, Sayeed (2022) Prevalence and correlates of alcohol and tobacco consumption among research scholars: evidence from a cross-sectional survey of three Indian universities. Drugs, Habits and Social Policy, 23 (2), 140-155. (doi:10.1108/DHS-09-2021-0053).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Purpose: alcohol and tobacco consumption are significant public health concerns and considered some of the riskiest behaviors among students. Despite strong indications of heavy consumption of these substances, certain sections of the student population remain unexplored regarding their consumption patterns and associated factors, including research scholars pursuing Doctor of Philosophy degrees. This study aims to explore the patterns and correlations of consumption of alcohol and tobacco among doctoral students in three Indian universities.

Design/methodology/approach: a cross-sectional study was conducted on a total of 530 scholars from three central universities, Aligarh Muslim University, Banaras Hindu University and Jawahar Lal Nehru University, and focused on two substances (alcohol and tobacco) frequently used by students in India. Bi-variate analysis and penalized logistic regressions were applied to analyse the prevalence and associated factors of alcohol, smoking and smokeless tobacco among doctoral students.

Findings: tobacco consumption was observed to be the dominant form of substance use among doctoral students. Findings revealed that 34% of scholars smoked and 25% consumed smokeless tobacco daily and around 14% consumed alcohol at least once a week. Major significant correlates of substance consumption among scholars were found to be gender, religion, parental mortality, dissatisfaction with academic performance and stress about future career/employment. Significant variation in substance use patterns was observed among universities.

Originality/value: this study provides first-hand evidence on substance use patterns and the correlates among doctoral students in three Indian universities. Findings indicate the implementation of specific intervention programs for mental health and counselling for this section of students to prevent substance use addiction would be beneficial.

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More information

e-pub ahead of print date: 15 August 2022
Published date: 1 September 2022
Keywords: Alcohol, Penalized logistic regression, Smoking, Tobacco, University students

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 491772
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/491772
ISSN: 2752-6739
PURE UUID: 250a4741-a2d6-43b8-a9ab-52eaeb239f61
ORCID for Saddaf Naaz Akhtar: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-0346-5220

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 03 Jul 2024 17:26
Last modified: 11 Jul 2024 02:14

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Contributors

Author: Mohd Usman
Author: Enu Anand
Author: Saddaf Naaz Akhtar ORCID iD
Author: Srikanth Reddy Umenthala
Author: Tarique Anwar
Author: Sayeed Unisa

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