Preliminary results of a new study show that sleep disturbance is strongly related to the use of alcohol, tobacco, and illicit drugs among student athletes in college.

Results show that student athletes with sleep difficulties were 151% more likely to use cigarettes, 36% more likely to drink alcohol, and 66% more likely to smoke marijuana. Sleep difficulties also predict an increased use of controlled, illegal, and banned substances. For example, student athletes with sleep difficulties were 317% more likely to use methamphetamine, 349% more likely to use cocaine, and 175% more likely to use steroids.

“The most surprising thing was the consistency with which sleep difficulties among student athletes predict increased use of many substances, including substances that are illegal and banned,” says senior author Michael Grander, PhD, director of the Sleep and Health Research Program at the University of Arizona in Tucson, in a release. “Across the board, students with sleep difficulties were more likely to smoke, drink, and use illegal substances.”

The study involved an analysis of survey data completed from 2011 to 2014 by 8,683 student athletes at US colleges and universities as part of the National College Health Assessment conducted by the American College Health Association. Participants were asked whether, in the past 12 months, “sleep difficulties” had “been traumatic or very difficult for you to handle.” Students also were asked whether they had used a list of specific substances in the past 30 days.

Regression analyses examined whether use of any of these substances was associated with sleep difficulties, adjusted for age, sex, and survey year. Also, discrepancy between student use and perceived typical use and sleep was examined.

“Sleep difficulties are quite common among students and especially student athletes,” says lead author Chloe Warlick, research assistant in the Sleep and Health Research Program. “Substance use is also a major public health problem. These results not only underscore the important link between sleep difficulties and substance use, but they show that this relationship is quite strong, even among student athletes.”

Grandner adds that the findings have important implications for both student health and athletic performance.

“Knowing this association between sleeping difficulty and substance abuse could be beneficial for coaches, physical therapists, and physicians,” he says. “These findings could provide important insight when treating sleep disturbances or attempting to improve athletic performance.”

The authors concluded that sleep-focused interventions should be evaluated to determine whether they decrease use of psychoactive substances.

The research abstract was published recently in an online supplement of the journal Sleep and presented June 6 in Boston at SLEEP 2017.