మా గ్రూప్ ప్రతి సంవత్సరం USA, యూరప్ & ఆసియా అంతటా 3000+ గ్లోబల్ కాన్ఫరెన్స్ ఈవెంట్లను నిర్వహిస్తుంది మరియు 1000 కంటే ఎక్కువ సైంటిఫిక్ సొసైటీల మద్దతుతో 700+ ఓపెన్ యాక్సెస్ జర్నల్లను ప్రచురిస్తుంది , ఇందులో 50000 మంది ప్రముఖ వ్యక్తులు, ప్రఖ్యాత శాస్త్రవేత్తలు ఎడిటోరియల్ బోర్డ్ సభ్యులుగా ఉన్నారు.
ఎక్కువ మంది పాఠకులు మరియు అనులేఖనాలను పొందే ఓపెన్ యాక్సెస్ జర్నల్స్
700 జర్నల్స్ మరియు 15,000,000 రీడర్లు ప్రతి జర్నల్ 25,000+ రీడర్లను పొందుతున్నారు
Augustine Kule, Didan Jacob Opii, Bonniface Obura
Background: Self-medications the practice of taking medicines to cure any illness without any prescription from a healthcare provider. The prevalence of self-medication among university students is remarkably high globally and varies from country to country. This study determined the prevalence of self-medication and the sources of drugs used for self-medication among undergraduate students enrolled at the faculty of health sciences, Lira University.
Methods: A descriptive cross-sectional survey was conducted among 228 undergraduate students enrolled at the Faculty of Health Sciences, selected by stratified systematic random sampling. Data were collected using selfadministered semi-structured questionnaires and analysed with SPSS version 20 statistical software.
Results: A total of 199 participants were interviewed. The overall prevalence of self-medication was 59.3%. Headache, body weakness, fever, flue, lack of appetite, and lower abdominal pain were reported as the most common complaints related to self-medication practice. Regarding the sources of drugs used for self-medication, 16.9% borrowed from friends/relatives, 11.0% used left-overs, 59.3% bought from drug shops and 12.7% from community drug shops.
Conclusion/recommendation: There is a need to educate the health science students about the disadvantages and the impacts of Self-Medication especially with prescription-only drugs not merely assuming they know as upcoming health professionals. There is a need to enforce the existing laws to discourage uncontrolled access to prescription-only drugs without prescription from trained healthcare providers and access to drug shops and pharmacies around student community.