PLoS ONE (Jan 2017)

Prevalence of alcohol use disorders among under- and post-graduate healthcare students in Italy.

  • Monica Lamberti,
  • Francesco Napolitano,
  • Paola Napolitano,
  • Antonio Arnese,
  • Vincenzo Crispino,
  • Gianclaudio Panariello,
  • Gabriella Di Giuseppe

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0175719
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 4
p. e0175719

Abstract

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A cross-sectional study was carried out on 641 medical students, 359 students attending a degree course in the healthcare professions, and 500 resident physicians, all undergoing health surveillance at the ambulatory of the Division of Occupational Medicine, Second University of Naples, Italy. 76.1% of the participants drank alcohol, with 85.5% of medical students, 77.4% of resident physicians, and 63% of healthcare-professions students reporting regular alcohol use. In the whole sample, the mean Audit-C score was 1.6 for men and 1.1 for women; only 5.5% of men and 7.1% of women had a hazardous alcohol consumption with an Audit-C score of respectively ≥4 and ≥3. Multivariate regression modeling revealed that regular alcohol use was more likely in individuals who were men, were younger, had a lower body-mass index, were active smokers, were habitual coffee drinkers, and who were resident physicians or medical students rather than healthcare-professions students. This finding identifies a need to assess alcohol use in medical-profession workers in order to identify risky behavior early on and to carry out rapidly effective preventive and curative interventions.