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Wired Awake

really motivated, so I needed something to make me focus. By the time it got to exams I was scared enough to work already. If you’re busy and going short on sleep, it’s really much easier to focus when you’ve got something like Red Bull or Pro Plus. If I took a lot, and drank coffee as well, I’d get a bit shaky. But I didn’t have any major side effects.”


The majority of student users appear to be consuming these substances in moderation, but half of those who have tried Pro Plus or a different caffeine tablet admitted they had exceeded the recommended dose at some point.

Few students seemed concerned about the possible side effects of excessive consumption of caffeine supplements and caffeine-based energy drinks. “The problem with caffeine is that the effects can vary, so it is difficult to say what is a safe level. High

38% of students buy energy drinks twice a week or more

levels of caffeine can be dangerous for people with high blood pressure or anxiety disorders,” said Lyndel Costain, a dietician. While some people experience no side effects from caffeine supplements, others suffer insomnia, nervousness and headaches.

There have been frequent allegations of health risks associated with certain brands of energy drink. France banned Red Bull in 2000 after an 18 year old Irish athlete, Ross Cooney, died after playing a basketball game soon after consuming four cans of the drink. Britain investigated the drink, but has only issued a warning against its consumption by pregnant women.
Some research also suggests that people who regularly consume energy drinks are more likely to develop diabetes mellitus. “There is plenty of research on the effects of caffeine, but it’s impossible to really know the effects of caffeine pills such as Pro Plus because they put other ingredients with them,” said Trevor Robbins, Professor of Cognitive Neuroscience at Cambridge University. “The same goes for energy

drinks.”

Varsity also spoke to one student who claimed to have worked after taking the recreational Class A drug ecstasy. “I’d been out, but I had an essay due in the next morning and I knew I had to get it done whether I was high or not,” he said. “I sat down to do it at about 2am, and I’d done it within 45 minutes – it would usually take me at least three hours to churn out that kind of work. I just worked like a machine. I was completely focused – I had this massive drive to work and felt no desire to procrastinate. I don’t think I’d ever take it specifically to work, but if I wanted to go out and take ecstasy and hadn’t finished my work yet, I wouldn’t worry.”


Students are becoming increasingly aware of trends among American university students to use prescription-only drugs,

46% of students use caffeine pills during exam term