Original Research Article | OPEN ACCESS

Use of antibiotics among undergraduate students of Delta State University, Abraka

O E Okolosi-Patani11 , U S Ahwinahwi2, O B Okoeko1

1Department of Pharmaceutical Microbiology; 2Departmant of Clinical Pharmacy and Pharmacy Administration, Faculty of Pharmacy, Delta State University, Abraka.

For correspondence:-  O Okolosi-Patani1   Email:  elohous@yahoo.com   Tel:  +2348033119273

Published: 31 December 2015

Citation: Okolosi-Patani1 OE, Ahwinahwi US, Okoeko OB. Use of antibiotics among undergraduate students of Delta State University, Abraka. J Sci Pract Pharm 2015; 2(1):8-12 doi: 10.47227/jsppharm.v2i1.3

© 2015 The author(s).
This is an Open Access article that uses a funding model which does not charge readers or their institutions for access and distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International (CC BY-NC 4.0). This license requires that reusers give credit to the creator. It allows reusers to distribute, remix, adapt, and build upon the material in any medium or format, for noncommercial purposes only. .

Abstract

Purpose:This study was designed to evaluate the use of antibiotics among undergraduate students of Delta State University, Abraka.
Methods:Self-administered, structured, pretested questionnaire was used to collect data from 450 students pursuing different courses of study using a random sampling technique.
Results:The result obtained revealed that 63.1% of the students studied had engaged in self-medication with antibiotics in the last six months preceding the study.   Skin infection (26.8%) was the most common condition that provoked the students to self-medication with antibiotics, while respiratory tract infection (13%) was the least. Beta lactam antibiotics particularly Ampicillin and cloxacillin combination (Ampiclox) was the most common antibiotics used by respondents while tetracycline was the least used.  The predominant reason for self-medication with antibiotic was prior knowledge about the drug (31%) followed by illness considered not serious for enough for consultation with a healthcare practitioner (27%). More female used antibiotics inappropriately than their male counterparts with a P-value of 0.01.
Conclusion: A high prevalence of inappropriate use of antibiotics was found amongst students of the institution studied.  This highlights the need for concerned efforts to strengthen and implement policies and legislations on advertising, prescription, sales and distribution of antibiotics..

Keywords: Inappropriate use, self-medication, antibiotics, community pharmacy and students

Journal Metrics
Impact Factors
» Thompson Reuters (ISI): 0.000
» H-5 index: 7 (2024)
» SCImago Journal Rank (SJR): 0.000


Manuscripts
» Submission to first review: 07-14 days
» Submission to acceptance: 20-30 days
» Acceptance to publication: 20-30 days

Article Tools

Share this article with



Archives

2022; 9: 
1.
2021; 8: 
1.
2020; 7: 
1.
2019; 6: 
1.
2018; 5: 
1, 2.
2017; 4: 
1.
2016; 3: 
1.
2015; 2: 
1.
2023; 10: 
1.
2014; 1: 
1.