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Wired Awake

A Varsity investigation has found that some Cambridge students are using prescription-only drugs in the hope that it will enable them to work more efficiently, while stimulant use in the form of caffeine pills and energy drinks is widespread. Two Cambridge professors have also claimed to have been offered the “brain-boosting” drug Ritalin by colleagues during international conferences.

In a Varsity survey, many students said they occasionally used caffeine pills such as Pro Plus or beverages marketed as “energy drinks”, which combine caffeine with other ingredients such as extracts from the high-caffeine guarana plant, taurine and other chemicals.

92 per cent had tried Red Bull, Relentless, or another brand of energy drink and 38 per

Katy Lee studies the effect of 'brain-boosting' drugs on student health

cent said they bought such a drink two or more times a week. This figure increases to 48 per cent in exam term, and 46 per cent of second or third year students had used Pro Plus or a different caffeine tablet during exam term.

“I drank a lot of Relentless during exam term last year,” said Laura Cremer, a second year MML student from Selwyn. “It was really useful for working into the night. We’d have a can of Relentless at about seven thirty and take a half an hour break to drink it. Then we’d work without any problems until maybe two in the morning.”

Another Selwyn student said taking caffeine tablets had improved her concentration during the early stages of her revision last year. “It was at the stage of my revision where I wasn’t