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Assessment of knowledge, perception, and awareness about self-medication practices among university students in Nepal

Krishnandan Shah, Shimul Halder, Syed Shabbir Haider

2021Heliyon51 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The objective of the present study was to assess the perceptions, knowledge, and awareness of self-medication practice among the university students in Nepal. This descriptive cross-sectional, questionnaire-based study was conducted on randomly selected 620 students from three different universities in Nepal. The study results revealed that 95.4% of students had reported self-medication, among which analgesics and antipyretic medications were mostly used (66 %); followed by anti-ulcerants (35.3%), antibiotics (33.9%), anti-allergic preparations (20%), and other categories (10.3%) of drugs. Study results also showed that, the major cause of self-medication was minor illness, and the prescriptions which were previously used to treat the similar disease conditions were the main source of motivation to do so. A significant portion of the respondents believed that self-medication might be acceptable to treat minor illness. Furthermore, students demonstrated variable responses regarding the doses, safety, toxicities, and health hazards towards self-medication without having appropriate knowledge of drugs. The findings of this study revealed the necessity of building awareness and strict implementation of the jurisdiction to minimize the practice of self-medication.

Topics & Concepts

Self-medicationMedicineMinor (academic)Medical prescriptionFamily medicinePerceptionNursingPsychologyLawPolitical scienceNeuroscienceAntibiotic Use and ResistanceDiverse Scientific Research StudiesPharmaceutical Practices and Patient Outcomes
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