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Survey says students avoided South West nightclubs over drink spiking fears

Research by student employment firm Stint shows impact on night time economy of drink spiking menace

Student employment firm Stint says a survey shows 75% of South West students have boycotted nightclubs over drink spiking fears

Three quarters of South West students have boycotted nightclubs over fears their drinks will be spiked, a new survey reveals.

The study by student employment start-up Stint , which began operating in Plymouth in mid-2021, also found 27% of the region’s students said they will avoid clubbing this New Years Eve due to concerns around spiking. Researchers also found that 80% of students across the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ are concerned about spiking or know someone who is.

The figures, and South West students’ reticence to visit nightclubs even when Covid restrictions allowed, is seen as a further blow for the Evening and Night Time Economy (ENTE), already reeling from the effects of Covid lockdowns and restrictions.


And Stint’s figures come as nightclubs around the country face the prospect of an especially difficult festive period with soaring Omicron cases and reduced footfall as customers choose Christmas over clubbing. As many as a third of clubs could close by New Years Eve due to soaring Omicron rates, Stint says.

The work app developer, which quizzed more than 1,000 students across the country, said the survey revealed 75% of students in the South West admitted to having boycotted night clubs due to spiking in the past.

Across the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ female students were more likely to say they were concerned or know someone who is concerned about spiking, with 88% saying they were concerned about spiking or knew someone who was, compared with 69% of male students. Overall, 80% of students said they were worried about spiking, or knew someone who was.

To make matters worse, the figures reveal that 27% of students intend to avoid clubbing to celebrate the New Year due to concerns about drink spiking.

Sol Schlagman, co-founder at Stint, said: “We believe university should be some of the best years of your life, and nightlife is a central part of the student experience.