New York University Langone Medical Center, Department of Population Health, New York, NY, USA; Center for Drug Use and HIV Research, New York University Rory Meyers College of Nursing, New York, NY, USA.
Columbia University, Department of Epidemiology, Mailman School of Public Health, New York, NY, USA.
Drug Alcohol Depend. 2017 Dec 1;181:20-24. doi: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2017.09.011. Epub 2017 Oct 6.
Ecstasy/MDMA has been one of the most prevalent party drugs for decades, and powder ecstasy recently increased in popularity. We examined trends in use to determine who to best target for prevention and harm reduction.
Secondary analysis of the 2007-2014 National Survey on Drug Use and Health, a repeated cross-sectional, nationally representative probability sample, was conducted. Linear trends in past-year ecstasy use and trends in demographic and other past-year substance use characteristics among ecstasy users were examined among participants ages 12-34 (N=332,560).
Past-year prevalence of ecstasy use was stable across years at 2% (P=0.693). Over time, the proportion of ecstasy users with a college degree increased from 11.5% in 2007/08 to 24.5% in 2013/14 (P<0.001). The proportion of users who were age 12-17 decreased, as did proportions of users who are non-Hispanic black, and reported income <$20,000/year (Ps<0.001). Prevalence of past-year use of marijuana, LSD, ketamine, and DMT/AMT/Foxy increased among ecstasy users (Ps<0.05); DMT/AMT/Foxy use increased more than four-fold from 2.1% in 2007/08 to 8.7% in 2013/14. Perception of great risk associated with LSD use decreased among users and ease of obtaining LSD increased (Ps<0.05). Past-year use of 5 or more other substances also increased over time (P<0.05).
Ecstasy use in the US appears to be increasing among those with college degrees and use of other substances among ecstasy users is growing-particularly use of otherwise rare substances such as tryptamines. Results inform prevention and harm reduction strategies in this increasingly shifting group of ecstasy users.
摇头丸/MDMA 是几十年来最流行的派对毒品之一,最近粉末摇头丸的人气上升。我们研究了使用趋势,以确定最适合预防和减少伤害的目标人群。
对 2007-2014 年全国毒品使用与健康调查进行二次分析,这是一项重复的横断面、全国代表性概率样本。对年龄在 12-34 岁的参与者(N=332560)进行了过去一年摇头丸使用的线性趋势和过去一年摇头丸使用者的人口统计学和其他物质使用特征的趋势分析。
过去一年摇头丸使用的流行率在各年保持稳定,为 2%(P=0.693)。随着时间的推移,拥有大学学历的摇头丸使用者比例从 2007/08 年的 11.5%增加到 2013/14 年的 24.5%(P<0.001)。年龄在 12-17 岁的使用者比例下降,非西班牙裔黑人的比例下降,报告年收入<20,000 美元的比例下降(P<0.001)。摇头丸使用者过去一年使用大麻、LSD、氯胺酮和 DMT/AMT/Foxy 的比例增加(P<0.05);DMT/AMT/Foxy 的使用比例从 2007/08 年的 2.1%增加到 2013/14 年的 8.7%,增加了四倍多。使用者对 LSD 使用的高风险认知下降,获得 LSD 的便利性增加(P<0.05)。过去一年使用 5 种或更多其他物质的比例也随时间增加(P<0.05)。
在美国,摇头丸的使用似乎在拥有大学学历的人群中增加,摇头丸使用者中其他物质的使用也在增加——特别是使用其他罕见的物质,如色胺。研究结果为这一不断变化的摇头丸使用者群体提供了预防和减少伤害的策略。