Stoltman Jonathan J K, Woodcock Eric A, Lister Jamey J, Greenwald Mark K, Lundahl Leslie H
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Neurosciences, School of Medicine, and Wayne State University, Detroit, MI 48201, USA.
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Neurosciences, School of Medicine, and Wayne State University, Detroit, MI 48201, USA; Department of Pharmacy Practice, Eugene Applebaum College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences, Wayne State University, Detroit, MI 48201, USA.
Drug Alcohol Depend. 2015 Mar 1;148:217-20. doi: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2015.01.010. Epub 2015 Jan 19.
Addiction research literature suggests some demographic groups exhibit a later age of substance use initiation, more rapid escalation to dependence, and worse substance use-related outcomes. This 'telescoping' effect has been observed more often in females but has not yet been examined in not-in-treatment heroin users or racial subgroups.
Not-in-treatment, intensive heroin-using adults screened for laboratory-based research studies (N=554; range 18-55 yr; mean age: 42.5 yr; 60.5% African American [AA]; 70.2% male) were included in this secondary analysis. A comprehensive drug history questionnaire assessed heroin-use characteristics and lifetime adverse consequences. We examined telescoping effects by racial and gender groups: Caucasian males and females; AA males and females.
Caucasian males initiated heroin use significantly later than AA males but this difference was not observed for age at intensive heroin use (≥3 times weekly). Caucasian males reported significantly more lifetime heroin use-related consequences, were more likely to inject heroin, and reported more-frequent past-month heroin use, but did not differ from AA males in lifetime heroin quit attempts or prior heroin treatment. Females, compared to males, reported later onset of initial and intensive use, but there was no gender-telescoping effect from initial to intensive heroin-use.
In this not-in-treatment sample, Caucasian males exhibited more rapid heroin-use progression and adverse consequences than AA males, i.e., within-gender, racial-group telescoping. Despite later-onset heroin use among females, there was no evidence of gender-related telescoping. Given the resurgence of heroin use, differential heroin-use trajectories across demographic groups may be helpful in planning interventions.
成瘾研究文献表明,一些人口群体开始使用毒品的年龄较晚,更快发展为依赖,且与毒品使用相关的后果更严重。这种“ telescoping”效应在女性中更常被观察到,但尚未在未接受治疗的海洛因使用者或种族亚组中进行研究。
纳入为基于实验室的研究进行筛查的未接受治疗、大量使用海洛因的成年人群(N = 554;年龄范围18 - 55岁;平均年龄:42.5岁;60.5%为非裔美国人[AA];70.2%为男性)进行本次二次分析。一份全面的药物使用史问卷评估了海洛因使用特征和终生不良后果。我们按种族和性别组检查了telescoping效应:白人男性和女性;非裔美国人男性和女性。
白人男性开始使用海洛因的时间明显晚于非裔美国人男性,但在大量使用海洛因(每周≥3次)的年龄上未观察到这种差异。白人男性报告的与海洛因使用相关的终生后果明显更多,更有可能注射海洛因,且报告过去一个月内使用海洛因更频繁,但在终生海洛因戒断尝试或既往海洛因治疗方面与非裔美国人男性没有差异。与男性相比,女性报告初次和大量使用海洛因的起始时间较晚,但从初次使用海洛因到大量使用海洛因没有性别telescoping效应。
在这个未接受治疗的样本中,白人男性比非裔美国人男性表现出海洛因使用进展更快和不良后果更多,即性别内、种族组的telescoping。尽管女性开始使用海洛因的时间较晚,但没有证据表明存在与性别相关的telescoping。鉴于海洛因使用的再度流行,不同人口群体中海洛因使用轨迹的差异可能有助于规划干预措施。