Rouen University Hospital, Clinical Investigation Center CIC 0204, 1 Rue de Germont, Rouen Cedex 76031, France.
BMC Public Health. 2013 Aug 6;13:724. doi: 10.1186/1471-2458-13-724.
University students face multiple stressors such as academic overload, constant pressure to succeed, competition with peers as well as concerns about the future. Stress should not be considered on its own, but should be associated with potential risk behaviors leading to onset of substance use and related problems heightened during the university period. The aim of this study was to determine the prevalence of main substance use and behavioral addictions among students in higher education in France and to examine the relationship with perceived stress.
A self-administered questionnaire was filled out by university student volunteers from Upper Normandy (France) either by anonymous online questionnaire or by paper questionnaire. Data collected included socio-economic characteristics, Perceived Stress Scale (PSS), substance use (tobacco, alcohol, and cannabis) and hazardous behaviors: alcohol abuse problems, smoking, consumption of cannabis, eating disorders, and cyber addiction.
A total of 1876 students were included. Mean PSS score was 15.9 (standard deviation = 7.2). Highly stressed students (4th quartile) were compared with lesser stressed students (1st quartile). A positive relation was observed between female gender, regular smokers, alcohol abuse problems, risk of cyberaddiction and especially eating disorders (AOR = 5.45, 95% CI = 3.42-8.69), and increasing PSS score. PSS score however, was not significantly related to the curriculum, regular alcohol use, drunkenness or binge drinking even after additional controlling for use of other substances. We found a significant negative association between stress and practice of sport: students with the most physical activity were less likely to report perceived stress (4th quartile: AOR = 0.57, 95% CI = 0.39-0.80).
This cross-sectional study among university students in France revealed that perceived stress was associated not only with known risks such as alcohol misuse, but also with new risks such as eating disorders and cyber addiction. These results could help to develop preventive interventions focussing on these risk behaviors and subsequently improving stress coping capacity in this high-risk population.
大学生面临多种压力源,如学业负担过重、不断成功的压力、与同龄人竞争以及对未来的担忧。不应单独考虑压力,而应将其与可能导致物质使用和相关问题发生的潜在风险行为联系起来,这些问题在大学期间更为突出。本研究旨在确定法国高等教育学生主要物质使用和行为成瘾的流行率,并探讨其与感知压力的关系。
通过匿名在线问卷或纸质问卷,由上诺曼底(法国)的大学生志愿者填写自我管理问卷。收集的数据包括社会经济特征、感知压力量表(PSS)、物质使用(烟草、酒精和大麻)和危险行为:酒精滥用问题、吸烟、大麻消费、饮食失调和网络成瘾。
共纳入 1876 名学生。平均 PSS 得分为 15.9(标准差=7.2)。将高度紧张的学生(第 4 四分位数)与压力较小的学生(第 1 四分位数)进行比较。观察到女性性别、经常吸烟、酒精滥用问题、网络成瘾风险,特别是饮食失调(优势比[OR] = 5.45,95%置信区间[CI] = 3.42-8.69)与 PSS 评分增加呈正相关。然而,即使在额外控制其他物质使用后,PSS 评分与课程、定期饮酒、醉酒或狂饮也没有显著相关。我们发现压力与运动之间存在显著负相关:活动量最大的学生不太可能报告感知压力(第 4 四分位数:OR = 0.57,95%CI = 0.39-0.80)。
这项在法国大学生中进行的横断面研究表明,感知压力不仅与酒精滥用等已知风险因素相关,还与饮食失调和网络成瘾等新风险因素相关。这些结果有助于制定针对这些风险行为的预防干预措施,从而提高这一高风险人群的应对压力的能力。