Use of psychoactive substances in three medical specialties: anaesthesia, medicine and surgery

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Abstract

In order to determine the prevalence of psychoactive substance use in three specialty groupings, 1,624 questionnaires were sent to physicians in medicine, surgery and anaesthesia; all had trained at the same academic institution. A response rate of 57.8% was achieved. Comparison of prevalence of impairment rates showed no differences between Surgery (14.4%), Medicine (19.9%) and Anaesthesia (16.8%). Substance abuse was clearly associated with a family history of abuse; 32.1% of the abusers had a family history of such abuse compared with 11.7% of the non-abusers. Increased stress at various career stages did not appear to increase substance abuse; problem areas during medical life times were similar for each specialty. Substances most frequently used were marijuana (54.7%), amphetamines (32.9%); and benzodiazepines (25.1%). Seventy-three used psychoactive drugs which were non-prescribed. Drug counselling programmes were judged inadequate by most. Use of alcohol and drugs by faculty members was reported by a number of respondents. © 1994 Canadian Anesthesiologists.

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APA

Lutsky, I., Hopwood, M., Abram, S. E., Cerletty, J. M., Hoffman, R. G., & Kampine, J. P. (1994). Use of psychoactive substances in three medical specialties: anaesthesia, medicine and surgery. Canadian Journal of Anaesthesia, 41(7), 561–567. https://doi.org/10.1007/BF03009992

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