Co-morbidity of Anxiety, alcohol and substance abuse among students at the Kenya Medical Training Colleges in Kenya

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Co-morbidity of Anxiety, alcohol and substance abuse among students at the Kenya Medical Training Colleges in Kenya

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dc.contributor.author Muriungi, Susan
dc.contributor.author Kihara, Michael
dc.contributor.author Ndetei, David
dc.contributor.author Matheka, Cyrus
dc.contributor.author Kipturgo, Mathew
dc.date.accessioned 2020-03-03T09:52:29Z
dc.date.available 2020-03-03T09:52:29Z
dc.date.issued 2014-12
dc.identifier.citation Susan Muriungi,Michael Kihara, MathewKipturgo, Davis Ndetei and Cyrus Matheka. Co-morbidity of Anxiety, alcohol and substance abuse among students at the Kenya Medical Training Colleges in Kenya. December 2014 International Journal of Current Research (IJCR): Volume 6, Issue 12 en_US
dc.identifier.issn 0975-833X
dc.identifier.uri http://repository.daystar.ac.ke/xmlui/handle/123456789/3155
dc.description.abstract Objectives: to determine the co-morbidity between anxiety and risk ofstudents at the Kenya Medical Training CollegeMethodology:A Social Demographic, BAI and the WHO ASSIST questionnaires were administered to 3107 consenting KMTC students, of whom 1181 (group A) were in Nairobi campus and the remaining1926 (group B) were in peripheral campuses across the country.Results:Prevalence of anxiety in groups A and B were 24.4% and 23.6% for moderate anxiety and 32.1% and 31.5% for severe anxiety. The risk of abuse of all the substances had similar lin alcohol which had a significant difference between the 2 groups (p=0.016). There was significant association between co morbidity of anxiety and risk of abuse of; alcohol (p=0.040, P=0.036 in group A and B respectively) and tobacco and cannabis (p=0.022 and p=0.024 in group B respectively). Conclusion:Anxiety and risk of alcohol and drug abuse was prevalent and significantly coamong the KMTC students. These findings were similar to those from other regions of the world among college students. This calls for appropriate interventions to promote prevention, control and clinical practices. en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.subject Anxiety en_US
dc.subject Alcohol en_US
dc.subject Substance abuse en_US
dc.subject Kenya Medical Training Colleges en_US
dc.title Co-morbidity of Anxiety, alcohol and substance abuse among students at the Kenya Medical Training Colleges in Kenya en_US
dc.type Article en_US


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