University of Birmingham, Institute for Mental Health, School of Psychology, 52 Pritchatts Road, Edgbaston, Birmingham, B152TT, UK.
Subst Abuse Treat Prev Policy. 2023 Mar 14;18(1):18. doi: 10.1186/s13011-023-00526-1.
Interest in the health and well-being of university students has increased in the UK and Ireland in the past two decades as their numbers have grown. Recent high-profile deaths of students after using illicit drugs have highlighted the importance of the topic for policy makers. This scoping review maps the state of the existing literature evaluating use of illicit drugs in university students in the UK and Ireland. It aims to highlight research gaps and inform policy.
We conducted a systematic search of papers related to psychoactive drug use in university students in the UK and Ireland published before August 2021. The 18 extracted study characteristics included author(s); year of publication; journal; location of data collection; study design; delivery method (e.g., online survey, in-person, postal survey); number of participants; response rate; participant course of study, year of study, degree level (i.e., undergraduate, postgraduate), gender and age; time-period assessed (e.g., lifetime, current use, past 12 months); primary aim; primary outcome; ethical approval; and funding source.
The PRISMA-guided search strategy identified 1583 papers for abstract review; of 110 papers retained for full-text review, 54 studies met criteria for inclusion for this paper. Primary outcomes were coded into five groups: prevalence and patterns of drug use; factors associated with drug use; attitudes and knowledge about, and motivation for, drug use; supply of drugs; consequences of drug use. The results show that there is no coherent body of research in this area. The prevalence of reported drug use has crept up and the range of substances reported has broadened over time, and attitudes to drugs on average have normalised. However, there are significant methodological limitations that limit the utility of these findings. There was little evidence of published work on prevention of, or intervention to reduce, drug-related harms.
The domains identified offer a framework for university administrators, researchers and policy makers to understand the potential response to drug use in university students in the UK and Ireland. Recommendations are made to fill the gaps in the research evidence base.
在过去的二十年中,随着英国和爱尔兰大学生人数的增加,人们对他们的健康和福祉的兴趣日益增加。最近,一些学生在使用非法药物后死亡的事件引起了公众的关注,这突显了该主题对政策制定者的重要性。本范围综述旨在绘制英国和爱尔兰大学生使用非法药物的现有文献评估状况。它旨在突出研究差距并为政策提供信息。
我们对英国和爱尔兰与大学生使用精神活性药物相关的论文进行了系统搜索,这些论文发表于 2021 年 8 月之前。提取的 18 项研究特征包括作者;发表年份;期刊;数据收集地点;研究设计;交付方式(例如在线调查、面对面、邮寄调查);参与者人数;回复率;参与者的学习课程、学习年限、学位水平(即本科生、研究生)、性别和年龄;评估的时间段(例如,终生、当前使用、过去 12 个月);主要目标;主要结果;伦理批准;和资金来源。
PRISMA 指导的搜索策略确定了 1583 篇论文进行摘要审查;在保留进行全文审查的 110 篇论文中,有 54 项研究符合纳入本论文的标准。主要结果被编码为五个组:药物使用的流行率和模式;与药物使用相关的因素;对药物使用的态度和知识,以及使用药物的动机;药物供应;药物使用的后果。结果表明,该领域没有连贯的研究体系。报告的药物使用流行率逐渐上升,报告的药物种类也随着时间的推移而扩大,对药物的态度平均趋于正常化。然而,存在着严重的方法学限制,限制了这些发现的实用性。几乎没有关于预防或减少与药物相关的伤害的干预措施的发表研究。
确定的领域为英国和爱尔兰的大学行政人员、研究人员和政策制定者提供了一个框架,以了解对大学生药物使用的潜在反应。提出了一些建议来填补研究证据基础上的空白。