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Journal of Attention Disorders
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13/3/259    most recent
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*Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder
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Article

Motives and Perceived Consequences of Nonmedical ADHD Medication Use by College Students: Are Students Treating Themselves for Attention Problems?

David L. Rabiner*, Arthur D. Anastopoulos, E. Jane Costello, Rick H. Hoyle, Sean Esteban McCabe, and H. Scott Swartzwelder

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: drabiner{at}duke.edu.


   Abstract
Objective: This study examines why college students without a prescription take ADHD medication, what they perceive the consequences of this to be, and whether attention problems are associated with this behavior. Method: More than 3,400 undergraduates attending one public and one private university in the southeastern United States completed a Web-based survey. Results: Nonmedical ADHD medication use in the prior 6 months was reported by 5.4% of respondents and was positively associated with self-reported attention difficulties. Enhancing the ability to study was the most frequent motive reported; nonacademic motives were less common. Students perceived nonmedical use to be beneficial despite frequent reports of adverse reactions. Conclusion: Students without prescriptions use ADHD medication primarily to enhance academic performance and may do so to ameliorate attention problems that they experience as undermining their academic success. The academic, social, and biomedical consequences of illicit ADHD medication use among college students should be researched further.

First published on July 29, 2008, doi:10.1177/1087054708320399

Journal of Attention Disorders 2009;13:259.

A more recent version of this article appeared on November 1, 2009


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