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Canadian Journal of Public Health = Revue Canadienne de Santé Publique logoLink to Canadian Journal of Public Health = Revue Canadienne de Santé Publique
. 2013 Nov 1;104(7):e496–e501. doi: 10.17269/cjph.104.3998

Energy Drink Consumption and Associations With Demographic Characteristics, Drug Use and Injury Among Adolescents

Hayley A Hamilton 114,214,, Angela Boak 114, Gabriela Ilie 314,414, Robert E Mann 114,214
PMCID: PMC6973899  PMID: 24495828

Abstract

Objectives

To examine energy drink consumption and its association with demographic characteristics, drug use, and injury among adolescents.

Methods

Data on 4,342 adolescents were derived from the 2011 Ontario Student Drug Use and Health Survey, a province-wide school-based survey of students in grades 7 through 12. The survey was based on a two-stage cluster design and analyses include appropriate adjustments for the complex sample design.

Results

Overall, 49.6% of adolescents had consumed energy drinks in the previous year. A total of 13.8% of seventh grade students had consumed energy drinks in the previous week compared to 19.1% of adolescents overall. Energy drink consumption in the previous year was highly associated with having used tobacco and cannabis in the previous year, the non-medicinal use of prescription drugs in the previous year, and binge drinking in the previous month. Consumption was also highly associated with sensation-seeking and self-reports of medical treatment for an injury (reported by 16% and 42% of adolescents, respectively). The odds of consuming energy drinks did not vary significantly for males and females, and sex was not a significant moderator of the associations examined.

Conclusion

These findings support the need for greater awareness of the extent of energy drink consumption among individual adolescents and the potential that additional health and behavioural risks may be associated with consumption.

Key words: Energy drinks, drug use, injury, sensation-seeking

Footnotes

Conflict of Interest: None to declare.

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