Department of Psychology, Bournemouth University, Poole, United Kingdom.
Staffordshire Centre for Psychological Research, School of Life Sciences & Education, Staffordshire University, Stoke-on-Trent, United Kingdom.
Eur Addict Res. 2021;27(1):75-82. doi: 10.1159/000507438. Epub 2020 May 6.
University students are a risk group for heavy substance use and the experience of various potentially severe negative substance use consequences which may impact on their health, social, and academic functioning. Whilst the experience of negative consequences of substance use is well understood in North American student samples, there is little data on these experiences in European students. In order to develop effective harm prevention and reduction interventions for students' substance use, there needs to be an understanding of the types of consequences experienced in European student samples.
The aim of the study was to investigate the prevalence and predictors of the experience of negative substance use-related consequences amongst university students in 7 European countries.
University students (n = 4,482) in Belgium, Denmark, Germany, the Slovak Republic, Spain, Turkey, and the UK completed an online survey of their substance use behaviours and the experience of associated negative consequences.
European students reported that experiencing a hangover or illness, missing class, being short of money, and experiencing memory loss were the most commonly experienced negative consequences of substance use. Not living with other students and using alcohol, cannabis, sedatives, and cocaine were also associated with higher odds of experiencing these negative consequences.
In contrast to North American data, European university students tended to experience consequences that are associated with lower level health risks rather than more severe consequences (e.g., drink-driving and physical injury). Harm prevention and reduction interventions for students should be targeted towards those consequences that are most salient to the target group to ensure feedback is relevant and potentially more effective in changing students' substance use behaviours.
大学生是重度物质使用和经历各种潜在严重的负面物质使用后果的风险群体,这些后果可能会影响他们的健康、社交和学业功能。虽然北美的学生样本中对负面物质使用后果的体验有很好的了解,但在欧洲学生中,关于这些体验的数据很少。为了为学生的物质使用制定有效的预防和减少伤害的干预措施,需要了解欧洲学生样本中经历的后果类型。
本研究的目的是调查 7 个欧洲国家大学生经历负面物质使用相关后果的流行率和预测因素。
比利时、丹麦、德国、斯洛伐克共和国、西班牙、土耳其和英国的大学生(n=4482)在线完成了关于他们的物质使用行为和相关负面后果体验的调查。
欧洲学生报告说,宿醉或生病、缺课、缺钱和记忆力减退是最常见的物质使用负面后果。不与其他学生同住以及使用酒精、大麻、镇静剂和可卡因也与经历这些负面后果的几率较高有关。
与北美的数据相比,欧洲大学生倾向于经历与较低健康风险相关的后果,而不是更严重的后果(例如,酒后驾车和身体受伤)。针对学生的预防和减少伤害干预措施应该针对那些对目标群体最相关的后果,以确保反馈是相关的,并有可能更有效地改变学生的物质使用行为。