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Journal Article

Citation

Arria AM, O'Grady KE, Caldeira KM, Vincent KB, Wish ED. J. Drug Iss. 2008; 38(4): 1045-1060.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2008, Florida State University, School of Criminology and Criminal Justice)

DOI

10.1177/002204260803800406

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Nonmedical use of prescription stimulants and analgesics was assessed from personal interviews with a stratified random sample of 1,253 first-year college students ages 17 to 20 attending a large public university (86% response rate). Lifetime and past-year prevalence of nonmedical use of stimulants, analgesics, or both was 19.6%wt and 15.6%wt, respectively. Nonmedical users had significantly lower grade point averages (GPAs) in high school as compared with nonusers; in college they skipped classes more often, spent more time socializing, and spent less time studying. For example, nonmedical users of both stimulants and analgesics skipped 21 % of their college classes whereas nonusers skipped 9%. Controlling for high school GPA and other factors, past-year nonmedical use independently predicted lower college GPA by the end of the first year of college; this effect was partially mediated by skipping more classes. Nonmedical users of prescription drugs comprise a high-risk group for academic problems in college.


Language: en

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