Perceptions and Practices of Self-Medication among Medical Students in Coastal South India

Nithin Kumar(Manipal Academy of Higher Education), Tanuj Kanchan(Manipal Academy of Higher Education), Bhaskaran Unnikrishnan(Manipal Academy of Higher Education), T. Rekha(Manipal Academy of Higher Education), Prasanna Mithra(Manipal Academy of Higher Education), Vaman Kulkarni(Manipal Academy of Higher Education), Mohan Kumar Papanna(Manipal Academy of Higher Education), Ramesh Holla(Manipal Academy of Higher Education), Surabhi Uppal(Manipal Academy of Higher Education)
PLoS ONE
August 28, 2013
Cited by 272Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Self-medication is a common practice worldwide and the irrational use of drugs is a cause of concern. This study assessed the prevalence of self-medication among the medical students in South India. The data was analysed using SPSS version 11.5. A total of 440 students were included in the study. The prevalence of self-medication was 78.6%. A larger number of females were self-medicating (81.2%) than males (75.3%). The majority of the students self-medicated because of the illness being too trivial for consultation (70.5%). Antipyretics were most commonly self-medicated by the participants (74.8%). Only 47% of the participants opined that self-medication was a part of self-care and it needs to be encouraged. 39.3% of the participants perceived that the supply of medicine without prescription by the pharmacist can prevent the growing trend of self-medication. Easy availability and accessibility to health care facilities remains the cornerstone for reducing the practice of self-medication.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis