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Rise in 'smart drug' use at Bristol University | Rise in 'smart drug' use at Bristol University |
(about 17 hours later) | |
A Bristol University doctor has warned of an increase in the use of a so-called smart drug to help city students revise. | A Bristol University doctor has warned of an increase in the use of a so-called smart drug to help city students revise. |
The prescription drug modafinil, prescribed for sleep disorders, is used to stay awake to increase study time. | The prescription drug modafinil, prescribed for sleep disorders, is used to stay awake to increase study time. |
Students' health service director Dr Dominique Thompson said she had witnessed a rise in the number of students admitting taking it. | Students' health service director Dr Dominique Thompson said she had witnessed a rise in the number of students admitting taking it. |
She said she had also seen a handful of students suffering from side effects. | She said she had also seen a handful of students suffering from side effects. |
Dr Thompson said modafinil - labelled the "world's first safe smart drug" - would not be prescribed to students to help them study. | Dr Thompson said modafinil - labelled the "world's first safe smart drug" - would not be prescribed to students to help them study. |
She added that she had noticed an increase in the drug's use at the university in the past five years. | She added that she had noticed an increase in the drug's use at the university in the past five years. |
She and colleagues had also seen "three or four" students suffering from side effects in the past 12 months, she claimed. | She and colleagues had also seen "three or four" students suffering from side effects in the past 12 months, she claimed. |
Dr Thompson said the drug can make people "very jittery, anxious and on edge" and "unable to sleep for a very long time". | Dr Thompson said the drug can make people "very jittery, anxious and on edge" and "unable to sleep for a very long time". |
"The brain continues to form and develop until about the age 25, so if you're 18-20 taking medications that are specifically stimulants and related to amphetamines, I think there's a high risk something might go wrong," she said. | "The brain continues to form and develop until about the age 25, so if you're 18-20 taking medications that are specifically stimulants and related to amphetamines, I think there's a high risk something might go wrong," she said. |
She warned the long-term side effects of the drug's use were "still unknown", and warned against buying the drug online because "you don't know what you're buying". | She warned the long-term side effects of the drug's use were "still unknown", and warned against buying the drug online because "you don't know what you're buying". |
One university student who has admitted taking the legal drug, Harry Vokins, said he used it because he wanted to "get the best grade I can". | One university student who has admitted taking the legal drug, Harry Vokins, said he used it because he wanted to "get the best grade I can". |
Another student, Luke Higgins, said he had used it "because of pressure to do well". | Another student, Luke Higgins, said he had used it "because of pressure to do well". |
Dr Thompson said "an estimated 20% to 40%" of university students nationally had used smart drugs. | |
A spokesman said the university took the issue of "illegal drugs of any sort very seriously" including the so-called study/smart drugs without a medical prescription. | |
"The number of users of these drugs who seek help from our student services remains a very small percentage of the student population, with just a handful of cases among our 22,000 students," he said. |
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