Department of Sociology, Purdue University, West Lafayette, USA.
Department of Sociology, The Ohio State University, Columbus, USA.
Drug Alcohol Rev. 2020 Nov;39(7):888-897. doi: 10.1111/dar.13111. Epub 2020 Jul 7.
Participation in nightlife influences a range of health behaviours. Participants in various nightlife scenes have increasingly adopted prescription drug misuse into their substance use repertoires.
With 404 young adults recruited via time-space sampling in New York, we examine the relationship of nightlife participation-measured by number of scenes and the number of nights out in nightlife scenes-to prescription drug misuse during the past 3 months. Outcomes included frequency of misuse, escalation to non-oral consumption, polydrug use, social problems and symptoms of dependence.
Negative binomial regressions indicate nightlife participation is associated with increased frequency of misuse measured by number of scenes (incidence rate ratio = 1.114, P < 0.05) and number of nights out (incidence rate ratio = 1.009, P < 0.001). Logistic regression models show nightlife participation is associated with increased odds of non-oral use (adjusted odds ratio; AOR = 1.334, P < 0.01) and polydrug use (AOR = 1.776, P < 0.001) measured by number of scenes, and non-oral use (AOR = 1.021, P < 0.001) and polydrug use (AOR = 1.023, P < 0.001) as measured by number of nights out. Nightlife participation is not associated with prescription drug problems or symptoms of dependence. Frequency of participation is associated with peer norms favourable to prescription drugs (B = 0.003, P < 0.01).
Nightlife participation has implications for prescription drug misuse. While shaping how often and in what manner young people consume prescription drugs, nightlife participation is not associated with harms experienced. Given the significance of the prescription drug trend in many world regions, these results suggest that increasing participation in nightlife shapes patterns of drug use, but in ways that do not lead to reported problems.
参与夜生活影响一系列健康行为。各种夜生活场景的参与者越来越多地将处方药物滥用纳入他们的物质使用曲目。
通过在纽约进行时空抽样,我们招募了 404 名年轻人,研究了夜生活参与度(通过场景数量和夜生活场景中的夜间外出次数来衡量)与过去 3 个月内处方药物滥用之间的关系。结果包括滥用频率、升级为非口服消费、多药使用、社会问题和依赖症状。
负二项回归表明,夜生活参与与滥用频率增加有关,通过场景数量(发病率比 = 1.114,P < 0.05)和夜间外出次数(发病率比 = 1.009,P < 0.001)来衡量。逻辑回归模型表明,夜生活参与与非口服使用(调整后的优势比;AOR = 1.334,P < 0.01)和多药使用(AOR = 1.776,P < 0.001)有关,通过场景数量来衡量,以及非口服使用(AOR = 1.021,P < 0.001)和多药使用(AOR = 1.023,P < 0.001)通过夜间外出次数来衡量。夜生活参与与处方药物问题或依赖症状无关。参与频率与有利于处方药物的同伴规范有关(B = 0.003,P < 0.01)。
夜生活参与与处方药物滥用有关。虽然塑造了年轻人消费处方药物的频率和方式,但夜生活参与与所经历的危害无关。鉴于许多世界区域的处方药物趋势的重要性,这些结果表明,增加夜生活参与度塑造了药物使用模式,但不会导致报告的问题。