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Caffeine Consumption Patterns Among Medical Students: A Survey Study
Brenton Phung;
Jonathan Shaw;
Seung Rim Yoo;
Ashley Lai;
Archana Rao;
Brian Nguyen;
Eileen Ly;
James Hagerty;
Ryan Chen;
Deborah Wright
ABSTRACT
Caffeine consumption is a common strategy to enhance alertness, particularly among medical students managing intense academic demands. This study examines caffeine intake across different stages of medical training—first-year (M1), second-year (M2), and third-year (M3) medical students—to determine whether intake increases as students progress. M1–M3 students at a California medical school completed an anonymous survey (8/14/25–8/28/25) on weekly caffeine intake. Likert-scale questions assessed consumption and impact. SPSS 28 was used; nonparametric tests and Spearman’s correlation identified significant differences (adjusted p ≤ 0.05). Caffeine totals were calculated per item.Among 122 respondents, M3s consumed more caffeine from coffee than M1s (p = .028) and M2s (p = .010), and more from OTC drugs than M1s (p = .010) and M2s (p = .006). Higher modified CAGE scores (1–3) were linked to greater caffeine intake than score 0 (p < .001–.040).Caffeine use increased with training level, highest in M3s, likely due to rising demands. Tea remained stable; soft drink use declined. M3s consumed more energy drinks and chocolate. Findings align with stress-related stimulant use. Limitations include single-site, self-report data, and lack of longitudinal or confounding variable control.
Citation
Please cite as:
Phung B, Shaw J, Yoo SR, Lai A, Rao A, Nguyen B, Ly E, Hagerty J, Chen R, Wright D
Caffeine Consumption Patterns Among Medical Students: Survey Study