Goldsworthy Richard C, Schwartz Nancy C, Mayhorn Christopher B
Research & Development, Academic Edge Inc, 108 E 14th St, Bloomington, IN 47408, USA.
Am J Public Health. 2008 Jun;98(6):1115-21. doi: 10.2105/AJPH.2007.123257. Epub 2008 Apr 29.
We sought to document the frequency, circumstances, and consequences of prescription medication-sharing behaviors and to use a medication-sharing impact framework to organize the resulting data regarding medication-loaning and -borrowing practices.
One-on-one interviews were conducted in 2006, and participants indicated (1) prescription medicine taken in the past year, (2) whether they had previously loaned or borrowed prescription medicine, (3) scenarios in which they would consider loaning or borrowing prescription medicine, and (4) the types of prescription medicines they had loaned or borrowed.
Of the 700 participants, 22.9% reported having loaned their medications to someone else and 26.9% reported having borrowed someone else's prescription. An even greater proportion of participants reported situations in which medication sharing was acceptable to them.
Sharing prescription medication places individuals at risk for diverse consequences, and further research regarding medication loaning and borrowing behaviors and their associated consequences is merited.
我们试图记录处方药共享行为的频率、情况和后果,并使用一个药物共享影响框架来整理有关药物出借和借用行为所产生的数据。
2006年进行了一对一访谈,参与者指出(1)过去一年服用的处方药,(2)他们以前是否出借或借用过处方药,(3)他们会考虑出借或借用处方药的情形,以及(4)他们出借或借用过的处方药类型。
在700名参与者中,22.9%报告曾将自己的药物借给他人,26.9%报告曾借用过他人的处方药。报告称药物共享对他们来说可以接受的参与者比例更高。
共享处方药会使个人面临各种后果的风险,因此有必要对药物出借和借用行为及其相关后果进行进一步研究。