Prevalence of ADHD diagnosis and nonmedical prescription stimulant use in medical students.

Jeffrey P Tuttle, Neil E Scheurich, John Ranseen
Author Information
  1. Jeffrey P Tuttle: Department of Psychiatry, University of Kentucky, 3470 Blazer Parkway, Lexington, KY 40509, USA. jptutt0@email.uky.edu

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: The authors aimed to determine the prevalence of ADHD diagnosis and the prevalence of nonmedical prescription stimulant use among a sample of medical students.
METHODS: An anonymous survey was administered to 388 medical students (84.0% return rate) across all 4 years of education at a public medical college.
RESULTS: Eighteen medical students (5.5%) reported being diagnosed with ADHD and 72.2% of those students were diagnosed after the age of 18. Thirty-three medical students (10.1%) reported using prescription stimulants for nonmedical purposes during their lifetime. The most commonly reported motivation for nonmedical prescription stimulant use was to improve academic performance. There was no significant correlation between an ADHD diagnosis and a history of nonmedical prescription stimulant use (p=0.072).
CONCLUSION: This survey suggests that medical students appear to be a relatively high-risk population for nonmedical prescription stimulant use.

MeSH Term

Adult
Attention Deficit Disorder with Hyperactivity
Central Nervous System Stimulants
Child
Drug Prescriptions
Female
Humans
Male
Prevalence
Students, Medical
Surveys and Questionnaires

Chemicals

Central Nervous System Stimulants

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0medicalstudentsnonmedicalprescriptionstimulantuseADHDdiagnosisreportedprevalencesurveydiagnosedOBJECTIVE:authorsaimeddetermineamongsampleMETHODS:anonymousadministered388840%returnrateacross4yearseducationpubliccollegeRESULTS:Eighteen55%722%age18Thirty-three101%usingstimulantspurposeslifetimecommonlymotivationimproveacademicperformancesignificantcorrelationhistoryp=0072CONCLUSION:suggestsappearrelativelyhigh-riskpopulationPrevalence

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