Abstract

Alcohol consumption is a major public health problem facing universities. The objectives of the present study were to investigate alcohol consumption and the behaviors associated with it among Romanian university medical students, with particular reference to sex differences, behavioral consequences, and lifestyle patterns. We performed a cross-sectional study on 722 medical students (60.4% females; 39.6% males); the participants filled out a validated questionnaire containing the following items co-occurring with alcohol consumption: smoking, illicit drug use, energy drink consumption, and other behavioral drinking consequences. Physical activity was estimated using the IPAQ questionnaire. We statistically analyzed the interrelation between alcohol consumption and target factors. The present study showed a high percentage of at-risk drinkers among male (15.0%) and female medical students (14.9%) in the studied group. Male students reported higher illicit drug use and physical activity than female students, but the at-risk female drinkers’ group consumed more drugs than the low-risk female drinkers. Both male and female drinkers engaged in other risky behaviors correlated with drinking (e.g., smoking, low academic performance, and driving a car after drinking). Public health policies, strategies, and interventions should be initiated to reduce alcohol consumption and associated behaviors in medical students.

Highlights

  • Alcohol consumption is a considerable public health concern and the leading cause of global suffering

  • Less is known about the prevalence of alcohol consumption among Romanian medical students and about its association with risky behaviors, so our study aimed to investigate the health-risk behaviors—smoking, illicit drug use, and energy drink consumption—

  • The study investigated how such consumption is correlated with (a) sociodemographic aspects in the medical school study group, (b) behaviors associated with drinking, (c) the behavioral consequences of alcohol drinking, and (d) the levels of physical activity and other healthy behaviors

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Summary

Introduction

Alcohol consumption is a considerable public health concern and the leading cause of global suffering. Of particular concern are the health issues and social effects of different alcohol consumption patterns among continents and countries. Health Organization (WHO) report, about three million people died due to the harmful use of alcohol in 2016 (5.13% of all deaths) [1]; elevated alcohol consumption is recorded in Eastern European Countries, including Romania [2]. Heavy episodic (binge) drinking is lower among adolescents (15–19 years) than in the total population, but it is the highest at 20–24 years [2]. From this age range, university students deserve particular attention.

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