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©The Author(s) 2022.
World J Psychiatry. Oct 19, 2022; 12(10): 1268-1286
Published online Oct 19, 2022. doi: 10.5498/wjp.v12.i10.1268
Published online Oct 19, 2022. doi: 10.5498/wjp.v12.i10.1268
Region | Study type | Study group | Result | Ref. |
Ghana | Population-based study | School-going adolescents | 3.6% prevalence of substance use in the preceding 1 mo | [50] |
Ghana | Cross-sectional study | 894 high school students with a mean age of 17.4 yr | Lifetime alcohol use was 25.1%; with cigarette use and lifetime marijuana use being 7.5% and 2.6% respectively. Current alcohol use was 46.2%; current cigarette and marijuana use was 44.6%; and 58.3%, respectively | [51] |
Ghana | Cross-sectional survey | 227 street children and youths | Current prevalence of alcohol and marijuana use was 12% and 16.2%, respectively | [52] |
Nigeria | Cross-sectional study Northwestern Nigeria | 280 secondary school students | 56% of them had a history of substance use (kolanut, cigarettes, and marijuana) | [53] |
Nigeria | Cross-sectional study Southwestern Nigeria | 249 secondary school students | Prevalence of alcohol and substance use was 21.7% and 26.3%, respectively, tramadol being the substance of choice | [54] |
Nigeria | National drug survey | Population-based | Approximately 14.3 million people (accounting for 14.4% of the population aged between 15-64 yr) had a history of current and continuing substance drug use, with close to 3 million having at least a form of drug use disorder | [55] |
Ethiopia | Demographic and health survey | Population-based | 4% of youths and 6.3% of individuals in age groups of 25-29 yr smoked cigarettes, while 53% of men and 45% of women consumed alcohol | [59] |
Ethiopia | Analysis of data extracted from the 2016 Ethiopia Demographic and Health Survey | 12688 male cohorts | 62.5% (7931 males) had a current history of substance use (alcohol, Kath, or tobacco). Inhabitants of the Amhara, Tigray and Oromia regions had a current substance use prevalence of 18.5%, 14.2% and 12.8%, respectively | [60] |
Ethiopia | Cross-sectional study Northeastern Ethiopia | 730 university students in | Lifetime prevalence of alcohol consumption, Kath chewing, and cigarette smoking was 33.1%, 13% and 7.9%, respectively, and current prevalence was 27.9%, 10.4% and 6.4% | [61] |
Ethiopia | Cross-sectional study | 794 university students | 73.7% had a history of substance use with the lifetime prevalence of illicit drugs being 23.3% | [63] |
Egypt | Hospital-based study (single-center experience) | First episode drug-induced psychosis patients | Substance abuse rates are as high as 10%-20% the global average with cannabis and tramadol being the most abused substance | [65] |
Tunisia | Cross-sectional study | 298 persons with a history of drug use | Cannabis was the most widely consumed illicit drug, followed by benzodiazepines, buprenorphine, cocaine, and ecstasy | [68] |
Tunisia | Mediterranean school survey project | Secondary school students | Tobacco, alcohol, and cannabis were the substances most frequently used | [66,67] |
Tunisia | Epidemiologic/toxicological investigation Northern Tunisia | 11170 suspected drug users | A preponderance of males (97.4%), with a median age of 29 ± 7.91 yr. 91.3 % were single | [69] |
South Africa | School-based survey | Secondary school students | 13% of the students (aged 19 yr and below) had an history of cannabis use, although current use was 9%. 12% had a current use of heroin, 11% used inhalants and 6% consumed mandrax | [73] |
South Africa | National household survey | Population-based | Past 3 mo prevalence for cannabis among 15-19-years-old was 3% | [74] |
Region | Herbal preparation | Plant | Bioactive compound | Central nervous system activity | Toxicity | Ref. |
East Africa | Khat chewing, drink made from dried leaves or smoking dried leaves | Catha Edulis | Phenylalkylamines and the cathedulins (Cathinone) | Improves performance, stay alert and to increase work capacity, excitement, appetite loss and euphoria | Memory impairment, sleeping disorders, liver toxicity, cardiovascular disease, psychosis and poor academic performance | [115,117,124-126] |
West Africa | Different parts of the plant are smoked or used to make concoctions | Datura specie including stramonium and Datura metal | Atropine, scopolamine, and hyoscamine | Anticholinergic and hallucinogenic activity | Hyperthermia, tachycardia, delirium, pronounced amnesia, severe mydriasis, bizarre behaviors and painful photophobia | [135,136,141,145-148] |
West Africa | Root bark concoctions | Tabernanthe iboga | Ibogaine | Stimulatory, hallucinogenic, and sedative effects | Development of ataxia, tremor, cardiac toxicity, and death | [149-151] |
South Africa | Ubulawu drink | Silene undulata and Synaptolepis | Triterpenoid saponins | Mood altering effects including stimulating vivid or lucid dreams | Confusion | [113] |
South Africa | Chewed, smoked, snorted or swallowed | Sceletium tortuosum | Mesembrenone, mesembrenol, mesembrine and tortuosamine | Increased libido, decreased stress, euphoria and appetite suppression | Anxiety, headache, hypertension, irritability, insomnia and nausea | [154,155] |
- Citation: Onaolapo OJ, Olofinnade AT, Ojo FO, Adeleye O, Falade J, Onaolapo AY. Substance use and substance use disorders in Africa: An epidemiological approach to the review of existing literature. World J Psychiatry 2022; 12(10): 1268-1286
- URL: https://www.wjgnet.com/2220-3206/full/v12/i10/1268.htm
- DOI: https://dx.doi.org/10.5498/wjp.v12.i10.1268