Sex Differences in the Factors Associated With Lifetime Alcohol, Tobacco and Cannabis Use Among Ghanaian University Students: A Cross-Sectional Study
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Public Health Challenges
Abstract
Background: Substance use among university students in Ghana is a pressing concern, with pronounced sex differences yet
poorly characterised determinants. This study examined factors associated with lifetime alcohol, tobacco and cannabis use among
undergraduate students, with explicit attention to sex-specific patterns.
Methods: A cross-sectional study was conducted from January to March 2023 at the University for Development Studies, Tamale.
A total of 600 undergraduate students were recruited using quota sampling proportional to school, year and sex, followed by simple
random selection (response rate 100%). Lifetime use was defined as self-reported use of each substance at least once, measured
using an adapted World Health Organization (WHO) Student Drug Use Survey. Sex-stratified modified Poisson regression with
robust standard errors estimated prevalence rate ratios (aPRRs) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs).
Results: Lifetime prevalence was 17.7% for alcohol, 17.0% for tobacco and 16.7% for cannabis. Males reported higher use across
all substances (alcohol: 31.1%; tobacco: 30.6%; cannabis: 27.4%) than females (11.3%, 10.6%, 11.6%). In the total sample, male sex
(aPRR 2.01), older age ( > 24 years) (1.85) and peer or family drug history (1.41–1.48) predicted higher alcohol use, whereas Islamic
faith (0.59) and residing at a friend’s house (0.49) were protective. Male sex (3.12) and non-Christian religion (3.28) predicted
tobacco use. Male sex (2.56) was the only pooled predictor of cannabis use. Sex-stratified analyses revealed distinct patterns: strict
parental supervision and absence of family conflict protected males against alcohol use; Islamic faith protected females; residential
autonomy and persistent family conflict were female-specific cannabis risk factors.
Conclusions: Sex differences profoundly shape substance use among university students in Ghana. Religion, parental oversight
and family dynamics are key protective or risk factors that differ by sex. Prevention strategies must be sex-sensitive and culturally
grounded.
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Research Article
Citation
Salifu, Y., Lasong, J., Alhassan, A., Odonkor, F. O., & Salifu, T. (2026). Sex Differences in the Factors Associated With Lifetime Alcohol, Tobacco and Cannabis Use Among Ghanaian University Students: A Cross‐Sectional Study. Public Health Challenges, 5(2), e70250.
