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. 2019 Apr 19;24:103930. doi: 10.1016/j.dib.2019.103930

Dataset on perception of public college students on underage drinking in Nigeria

Olujide A Adekeye a,e,, Emmanuel O Amoo b, Sussan O Adeusi a, Olufunke O Chenube c, Frederick Ahmadu d, Joseph Idoko e
PMCID: PMC6502769  PMID: 31080852

Abstract

Alcohol is the most widely used substance of abuse among youths in Nigeria. Underage drinking poses a serious public health problem in most colleges and despite the health and safety risk, consumption of alcohol is rising. Having recourse to the public health objective on alcohol by the World Health organization, which is to reduce the health burden caused by the harmful use of alcohol, thereby saving live and reducing injuries, this data article explored the nature of alcohol use among college students, binge drinking and the consequences of alcohol consumption. Secondary school students are in a transition developmentally and this comes with its debilitating effects such as risky alcohol use which affects their health and educational attainment [1], [2]. This data article consists of data obtained from 809 (ages 14–20 years) participants from selected schools in Ota, near Lagos State, Nigeria. For data collection, the youth questionnaire on underage drinking was employed. This data article presents information on participants' alcohol demographics. Analyses of the data can provide insights into heavy episodic drinking (HED), ever drinkers, prevalence of alcohol consumption, strategies to reducing alcohol use, reasons for underage drinking and effects of alcohol consumption. The data will be useful for public health interventions.

Keywords: Alcohol, College, Underage drinking, Youths, Nigeria


Specifications Table

Subject area Psychology
More specific subject area Counselling Psychology, Health Psychology
Type of data Tables
How data was acquired Use of questionnaire for data collection
Data format Raw and analyzed (descriptive statistics)
Experimental factors Cross sectional research design using the youth questionnaire on underage drinking
Data source location Surveys were conducted among college students in Ota, Nigeria
Data accessibility Data is included in this article
Related research article Adekeye OA, Adeusi SO, Chenube OO, Ahmadu FO, Sholarin MA. Assessment of Alcohol and Substance Use among Undergraduates in Selected Private Universities in Southwest Nigeria. IOSR Journal of Humanities and Social Science (IOSR-JHSS) 2015 20(3): 1–7. http://www.iosrjournals.org/iosr-jhss/pages/20%283%29Version-2.html.
Value of the Data
  • The data on the strategies to reducing underage alcohol consumption in Nigeria can be compared with those from other Africa nations and the global community

  • The data can be useful in analyzing gender differences in the volume of alcohol consumed

  • The data can also be useful in analyzing age difference in the volume of alcohol consumed

  • The nature of the data may serve a heuristic basis for alcohol research

  • The data can be used by counselling psychologist serving senior secondary school (High school) students

  • The data can assist with planning for public health interventions

1. Data

Of the 809 students surveyed, 657 (81.2%) reported having drank alcohol. About half of the students (330 [50.2%]) had their first drink between ages 14 and 17 while 253 (39%) had their first drink between ages 10 and 13 years (see Fig. 1). Comparatively, in the United States, by age 15, 33% of teens have had at least 1 drink and about 60% of teens by age 18 have had at least 1 drink [3], [4]. 54 of the respondents reported to having more than five drinks in a single drinking episode, with 34 of these respondents saying they had done so within the last month. Data on the frequency of alcohol consumption show that 154 respondents drink at least once a week, 427 consume alcohol at least once a month while 76 respondents drink alcohol more than once a month (Table 1). Five cross tabulations were presented on gender and age responses to items on ever drank alcohol, frequency of drinks, problem of alcohol consumption, participant's perception on drinking and driving and whether alcohol consumption has increased, decreased or remained at the same level of consumption. The analyses are in Table 2a–e.

Fig. 1.

Fig. 1

The histogram showing age at first drink.

Table 1.

Frequency of alcohol consumption.

Frequency of drink At least once a week At least once a month More than once a month
Frequency 154 427 76

Table 2.

a) Crosstabulation of ever drank alcohol by gender and age of respondents. b) Crosstabulation of alcohol consumption by gender and age of respondents. c) Crosstabulation of gender and age responses on problem of alcohol consumption. d) Crosstabulation of gender and age responses on problem of drinking and driving. e) Crosstabulation of gender and age responses on prevalence of alcohol consumption.

Ever Drank
Total
Yes No
Gender Male 438 115 553
Female 219 37 256
Total 657 152 809
Age Group 14years 73 31 104
15–17years 497 71 568
18–20years 87 50 137
Total 657 152 809
Frequency of alcohol consumption n = 657
Total
Once a Week Once a Month More than once a Month
Gender Male 99 287 52 438
Female 55 140 24 219
Total 154 427 76 657
Age Group 14years 36 34 3 73
15–17years 93 348 56 497
18–20years 25 45 17 87
Total 154 427 76 657
Alcohol consumption is … n = 754
Total
Serious problem Not a problem Minor problem
Gender Male 447 34 29 510
Female 192 20 32 244
Total 639 54 61 754
Age Group 14years 72 10 8 90
15–17years 491 21 24 536
18–20years 76 23 29 128
Total 639 54 61 754
Drinking and driving n = 755
Total
Serious problem Not a problem Minor problem
Gender Male 450 27 36 513
Female 199 16 27 242
Total 649 43 63 755
Age Group 14years 72 7 12 91
15–17years 485 24 31 540
18–20years 92 12 20 124
Total 649 43 63 755
Prevalence alcohol consumption is … n = 729
Total
Increased Decreased Stayed the same
Gender Male 341 119 34 494
Female 180 35 20 235
Total 521 154 54 729
Age Group 14years 53 23 14 90
15–17years 402 101 23 526
18–20years 66 30 17 113
Total 521 154 54 729

Respondents were given some potential strategies for reducing underage drinking and were asked to pick which of the strategies or approaches they would support in the quest to decreasing alcohol use by the underage. Table 3 provides a summary of their responses [1], [5]. We also asked respondents about what they thought some of the negative consequences of alcohol consumption were and the most common answers were “been driven by drunk driver”, “being absent from school”, and “been drunk at a party” (Table 4). Our data revealed that the majority of students obtained alcohol from bars or restaurants (Table 5) and in Table 6, the most common answer they gave for why they drank alcohol was “it enables them to enjoy a party” [3], [6], [7].

Table 3.

Strategies to reducing alcohol consumption.

Approaches to decreasing alcohol use Frequency/(%) Rank
Alcohol educational interventions in schools 588 (72.7%) 1st
Use of mass media to advance Alcohol education 541 (66.9%) 2nd
Ban on alcohol advertising 490 (60.6%) 3rd
Improved law enforcement 402 (49.7%) 4th
Lectures by rehabilitated Alcohol users 384 (47.5%) 5th
More punishment 247 (30.5%) 6th
Suspending driving permit/license of drunk drivers 235 (29.0%) 7th
Alcohol-free recreational centres 200 (24.7%) 8th

Table 4.

Negative Consequences of Alcohol consumption.

Negative Consequences Frequency/(%)
Been driven by drunk driver 104 (24.4%)
Been absent from school 97 (22.7%)
Been drunk at party 86 (20.0%)
Been drunk at school 28 (6.6%)
Driving after drinking alcohol 27 (6.3%)
Had an injury 26 (6.0%)
Performing poorly in school 21 (5.0%)
Having family problems 21 (5.0%)
Been arrested 17 (4.0%)

Table 5.

Places where Youths obtain Alcohol.

Where alcohol is obtained from… Frequency/(%)
Bar/restaurant 322 (39.8%)
Liquor store 175 (21.6%)
Friends/relatives 169 (20.9%)
Parent's home 107 (13.2%)
Supermarket/convenience store 16 (2.0%)
Others 20 (2.5%)
Total 809 (100.0%)

Table 6.

Reasons for youths alcohol consumption.

Youths drink because Frequency/(%)
It enables them enjoy a party 525 (26.0%)
Peer influence and acceptance 485 (24.2%)
Relieves depression 478 (23.8%)
Boredom 318 (16.0%)
They want to stand up to authorities including parents 197 (10.0%)

2. Experimental design, materials and methods

We used a cross-sectional survey for this study on adolescent drinking in Nigeria. This dataset involved 809 students from some selected senior secondary schools in Ota, a sub-urban location in Southwest, Nigeria. Fig. 2 shows the age breakdown of participants by gender. This was represented by a population pyramid. Participants were selected from across all core subject areas such as sciences, arts and humanities and business classes through stratified and simple random sampling, to cater for variables such as gender, age, living location, subject area and ethnicity. Indeed, of the 809 students surveyed, 618 were Yoruba, 142 were Igbo, and 16 were Hausa (the remaining 33 students reported their ethnicity as “other”). The inclusion criteria included that the school principal/parents must sign a consent form or provide assent in writing; the participant (student) must be in senior secondary school class, and agree to participate freely. A participant must also be at least 14 years of age and not more than 20 years. Those who did not meet these criteria were excluded from the current study. The students were assured of the confidentiality of their responses. The questionnaire forms were filled in the classes with no interactions allowed among the participants and no access to the filled questionnaire forms by the school administrators. For data collection, an adapted questionnaire on youth alcohol consumption was employed. This questionnaire had items on use of alcohol and perception of youths to underage drinking and it elicited the desired information from the participants. The first part of the questionnaire dealt with respondents socio-demographic details. In order to ensure the psychometric requirements of the scale as advocated by Ref. [8], the reliability of the instrument was established using a test-retest reliability method. It was administered to 30 secondary school students and a second administration after a three-week interval with a Cronbach's Alpha of 0.83. The research trajectory was therefore considered adequate for data gathering purposes. All statistical analyses were performed using excel and IBM SPSS statistical software (v. 22).

Fig. 2.

Fig. 2

Population pyramid showing age of participants by gender.

Acknowledgments

The authors wish to acknowledge the management of Covenant University for providing full financial grant for this research work through the Covenant University Centre for Research, Innovation and Discovery (CUCRID).

Footnotes

Supplementary data to this article can be found online at https://doi.org/10.1016/j.dib.2019.103930.

Appendix A

Supplementary data to this article can be found online at https://doi.org/10.1016/j.dib.2019.103930.

Transparency document

The following is/are the supplementary data to this article:

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Appendix A. Supplementary data

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References

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Supplementary Materials

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mmc1.docx (29.4KB, docx)
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mmc2.xlsx (103.3KB, xlsx)
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mmc3.docx (31.3KB, docx)

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