Department of Oral Health Policy and Epidemiology, Harvard School of Dental Medicine, Boston, Massachusetts.
School of Medicine, University of Crete, Heraklion, Greece.
Am J Prev Med. 2020 Nov;59(5):733-741. doi: 10.1016/j.amepre.2020.04.027. Epub 2020 Oct 2.
To provide up-to-date substance use surveillance data among U.S. military veterans versus nonveterans, this study assesses current use of tobacco products, alcohol, marijuana, prescription pain relievers, tranquilizers, sedatives, stimulants, cocaine, heroin, methamphetamines, inhalants, and hallucinogens.
Pooled data were from the 2015-2017 National Survey on Drug Use and Health, a nationally representative, self-reported survey of the U.S. adult non-institutionalized population. Military veterans were those who had "ever been in the United States Armed Forces" and were "now separated/retired from reserves/active duty" (n=7,301). Nonveterans were those who had never been in the U.S. Armed forces (n=121,366). Age- and gender-stratified weighted prevalence estimates were calculated and compared with chi-square tests. All analyses were conducted in 2019.
Illicit substance use, including marijuana and cocaine, was generally lower among veterans than nonveterans, whereas use of licit substances such as tobacco and alcohol was higher among veterans than nonveterans. The most commonly used substances among veterans were tobacco and alcohol. Among male participants aged 18-25 years, 59.8% of veterans reported past-12-month cigarette/cigar smoking (vs 46.6% of nonveterans), whereas 17.6% reported heavy drinking (vs 12.2% of nonveterans). For both cigarette/cigar smoking and binge drinking, there was a marked narrowing of the male-female gap in prevalence with increasing age among veterans. Female veterans aged 18-25 years reported significantly higher opioid use than their nonveteran counterparts (54.7% vs 35.0%); they also had the highest prevalence of opioid misuse (15.3%) than any other group.
Intensified efforts are needed to reduce substance use among veterans and provide cessation and mental health services.
为了提供美国退伍军人和非退伍军人最新的物质使用监测数据,本研究评估了当前使用烟草制品、酒精、大麻、处方止痛药、镇静剂、安定、兴奋剂、可卡因、海洛因、冰毒、吸入剂和迷幻剂的情况。
本研究的数据来自 2015-2017 年全国毒品使用和健康调查,这是一项对美国非机构化成年人口进行的全国代表性、自我报告调查。退伍军人是指“曾经在美国武装部队服役”且“现已从预备役/现役退役/退休”的人(n=7301)。非退伍军人是指从未在美军服役过的人(n=121366)。采用年龄和性别分层加权患病率估计值,并采用卡方检验进行比较。所有分析均于 2019 年进行。
与非退伍军人相比,退伍军人使用非法物质(包括大麻和可卡因)的情况总体较低,而使用烟草和酒精等合法物质的情况较高。退伍军人最常使用的物质是烟草和酒精。在年龄为 18-25 岁的男性参与者中,59.8%的退伍军人报告过去 12 个月有吸烟/雪茄(与非退伍军人的 46.6%相比),而 17.6%报告有重度饮酒(与非退伍军人的 12.2%相比)。对于吸烟/雪茄和 binge drinking,随着年龄的增长,退伍军人的男女患病率差距明显缩小。18-25 岁的女性退伍军人报告的阿片类药物使用率明显高于非退伍军人(54.7%比 35.0%);与其他任何群体相比,她们的阿片类药物误用率(15.3%)也最高。
需要加强努力,减少退伍军人的物质使用,并提供戒烟和心理健康服务。