Center for Drug & Alcohol Studies, University of Delaware, Coral Gables, FL 33134, United States.
Drug Alcohol Depend. 2010 Jul 1;110(1-2):21-9. doi: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2010.01.015.
Although prescription drugs are readily available on the Internet, little is known about the prevalence of Internet use for the purchase of medications without a legitimate prescription, and the characteristics of those that obtain non-prescribed drugs through online sources. The scientific literature on this topic is limited to anecdotal reports or studies plagued by small sample sizes. Within this context, the focus of this paper is an examination of five national data sets from the U.S. with the purpose of estimating: (1) how common obtaining prescription medications from the Internet actually is, (2) who are the typical populations of "end users" of these non-prescribed medications, and (3) which drugs are being purchased without a prescription. Three of the data sets are drawn from the RADARS (Researched Abuse Diversion and Addiction-Related Surveillance) System, a comprehensive series of studies designed to collect timely and geographically specific data on the abuse and diversion of a number of prescription stimulants and opioid analgesics. The remaining data sets include the National Survey on Drug Use and Health (NSDUH) and the Monitoring the Future (MTF) survey. Our analysis yielded uniformly low rates of prescription drug acquisition from online sources across all five data systems we examined. The consistency of this finding across very diverse populations suggests that the Internet is a relatively minor source for illicit purchases of prescription medications by the individual end-users of these drugs.
虽然处方药在互联网上随处可见,但对于没有合法处方而通过互联网购买药物的流行程度,以及通过在线渠道获得未经处方药物的人群特征,人们知之甚少。关于这个主题的科学文献仅限于传闻报告或受到样本量小的困扰的研究。在这种情况下,本文的重点是检查来自美国的五个国家数据集,目的是估计:(1)从互联网上实际获得处方药物的情况有多普遍,(2)这些非处方药物的“最终用户”典型人群是谁,以及(3)哪些药物是未经处方购买的。其中三个数据集来自 RADARS(研究滥用、转移和成瘾相关监测系统),这是一系列全面的研究,旨在收集有关滥用和转移多种处方兴奋剂和阿片类镇痛药的及时和特定地理区域的数据。其余数据集包括国家药物使用和健康调查(NSDUH)和监测未来(MTF)调查。我们的分析结果一致表明,在我们检查的所有五个数据系统中,从互联网上获取处方药的比例都非常低。这一发现的一致性表明,互联网是个体药物最终用户非法购买处方药物的相对较小来源。