Department of Maternal and Child Health, Gillings School of Global Public Health, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, USA.
Injury Prevention Research Center, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, USA.
Subst Use Misuse. 2021;56(3):404-415. doi: 10.1080/10826084.2020.1868521. Epub 2021 Jan 6.
Given continued increases in "deaths of despair", there is a need to examine associations of factors across multiple domains of despair (i.e. cognitive, emotional, behavioral, biological) with opioid-related behaviors. An understanding of current and early life correlates of prescription opioid behaviors can help inform clinical care, public health interventions, and future life course research. Using data from Waves I (1994-1995; participants ages 12-18 years) and V (2016-2018; participants ages 34-42 years) of the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health ( = 10,685), we examined adolescent and adult demographic, mental and physical health, substance use, and behavioral characteristics associated with past 30-day prescription opioid use only, misuse only, and both use and misuse to no recent use or misuse in adulthood. Overall, 2.3% of adult participants reported past 30-day prescription opioid use only, 6.3% reported past 30-day misuse only, and 1.3% reported both prescribed use and misuse in the past 30 days. Physical health conditions in adolescence and adulthood were most common among those reporting use only and both use and misuse. Mental health conditions, other substance use, and delinquent behaviors in adolescence and adulthood were most common among those reporting misuse only and both use and misuse. Results from this nationally representative sample highlight the prevalence of specific prescription opioid behaviors and underscore the importance of targeting underlying drivers of prescription opioid use and misuse early in the life course. Continued implementation individual- and population-level approaches will be critical to addressing continued demand for opioids.
鉴于“绝望死亡”持续增加,有必要检查多个绝望领域(即认知、情感、行为、生物)的因素与阿片类药物相关行为的关联。了解当前和生命早期与处方类阿片类药物行为相关的因素有助于为临床护理、公共卫生干预和未来的生命历程研究提供信息。
利用国家青少年到成人健康纵向研究(NLAHS)第一波(1994-1995 年;参与者年龄 12-18 岁)和第五波(2016-2018 年;参与者年龄 34-42 岁)的数据,我们调查了青少年和成年期的人口统计学、心理健康和身体健康、物质使用和行为特征,这些特征与过去 30 天内仅使用处方类阿片、仅滥用处方类阿片、以及过去 30 天内同时使用和滥用处方类阿片但现在不再使用或滥用相关。
总体而言,2.3%的成年参与者报告过去 30 天内仅使用处方类阿片,6.3%报告过去 30 天内仅滥用处方类阿片,1.3%报告过去 30 天内同时使用和滥用处方类阿片。仅使用处方类阿片和同时使用和滥用处方类阿片的人在青少年和成年期的身体健康状况最常见。仅滥用处方类阿片和同时使用和滥用处方类阿片的人在青少年和成年期的心理健康状况、其他物质使用和不良行为最常见。
来自这个具有全国代表性的样本的结果突出了特定处方类阿片类药物行为的流行程度,并强调了在生命早期阶段针对处方类阿片类药物使用和滥用的潜在驱动因素的重要性。继续实施个人和人群层面的方法对于满足对阿片类药物的持续需求至关重要。