1. SELF MEDICATION PRACTICESAND PERCEPTION AMONG THE GOVERNMENT EMPLOYEES IN SOKOTO, NIGERIA
- Author
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Kaoje AU, Magaji BA, and G, Gana
- Subjects
Self-medication, practice and perception, Sokoto - Abstract
Background: Although responsible self-medication can provide cheaper alternative for treating common illness that may not need medical consultation, itcan promote irrational use of drugs, which can increase microbial resistance, abuse, addiction and lead to serious health hazards. Objective: To determine the perception and practice of self-medication; assess the determinants and predictors of self-medication practices among the respondents. Methodology: A cross sectional study design was used and 480 respondents participated in the study. Multistage sampling technique was used to select the respondents and data collected using interviewer-administered questionnaires. Data was analyzed with IBM SPSS version 20.0. Binary logistic regression analysis was performed. Statistical significance level was set at alpha error of 5%. Results: Mean age was 30.6±9.8 years. Majority (64%) of respondents have taken drugs within the last three months and 103 of them reported self-prescription giving self-medication prevalence of 34%.Pharmacy shops and patent medicine stores combined provided source for 94% of respondents.Antimalarial were most commonly self-medicated followed by analgesics then antibiotics. Though more than half of the respondents expressed high-risk perception, large proportion had poor knowledge of self-medication. Although none of the factors predicted the practice, respondents whoreside in high density areaswere four times more likely to engage in self-medication compared to those who live in low density areas (aOR=0.281, p Conclusion: A large proportion of the respondents indulge in self-medication while pharmacy shops and patent medicine stores were the main source. Neither of the respondents’ socio-demographic and other related characteristics influences their practice, however those whoreside in the high density area are more likely to engage in self-medication. There is need to raise public awareness of risks associated with self-medication practice.
- Published
- 2017
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