International Journal of Public Health Science (IJPHS)
Vol 15, No 1: March 2026

Comparative assessment of knowledge, attitude, and practice toward self-medication among health and non-health students at Daffodil International University, Dhaka (2022–2023)

Rahman, Md. Mizanur (Unknown)
Alam, Md. Jahir (Unknown)
Khatun, Ms Tamanna (Unknown)
Sutar, Chaity (Unknown)
Akter, Shabnaz (Unknown)
Mahmood, As-Ad Din (Unknown)
Khan, Sher Mostafa Sadiq (Unknown)



Article Info

Publish Date
05 Mar 2026

Abstract

Self-medication, a popular self-care practice, is common throughout the world and is responsible for serious health complications. The present investigation assessed the knowledge, attitudes, and practices of self-medication among healthcare and non-healthcare students at Daffodil International University, Savar, Dhaka, Bangladesh. A cross-sectional survey of 240 students from the Pharmacy and Environmental Science Departments, ages 19 to 24, was carried out between October 2022 and January 2023. Socio-demographics, knowledge, attitudes, information sources, common medications, and diseases treated were all covered in the pre-tested questionnaire used to gather data. SPSS v16.0 with correlations and descriptive statistics was used for the analysis. Among 240 participants, 50.8% were health science students and 49.2% were non-health science students; 45.8% were male, and 54.2% were female. Most (74.2%, p < 0.01) were aged 21-22 years, mainly in the 4th year (43.3%, p < 0.001). Knowledge analysis showed 37.5% knew over-the-counter (OTC) drugs (p < 0.001) and 55% supported self-medication for minor illness. Common conditions treated were headache (49.2%), fever (23.3%), and cold (16.7%). Painkillers were the most used drugs (39.2%), with family members as the main source of advice (50%). Knowledge had a significant correlation with health science students (p < 0.001). Attitudes revealed 70% used self-medication in the last 6 months; 67.5% discouraged peers, 55.8% reused prescriptions, 73.3% read leaflets, and 61.2% consulted doctors for adverse effects. Previous experiences (74.2%) were the main reason for self-medication. Self-medication is widespread among university students. Health science students demonstrated better knowledge and awareness against self medication while contrasted to non-healthcare students. Awareness programs are needed for all groups.

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Journal Info

Abbrev

IJPHS

Publisher

Subject

Health Professions

Description

International Journal of Public Health Science (IJPHS) is an interdisciplinary journal that publishes material on all aspects of public health science. This IJPHS provides the ideal platform for the discussion of more sophisticated public health research and practice for authors and readers world ...