Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC, USA.
Division of General Internal Medicine, Department of Medicine, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC, USA.
Subst Abus. 2021;42(4):487-492. doi: 10.1080/08897077.2021.1901176. Epub 2021 Apr 2.
Primary care settings provide salient opportunities for identifying patients with problematic substance use and addressing unmet treatment need. The aim of this study was to examine the extent and correlates of problematic substance use by substance-specific risk categories among primary care patients to inform screening/intervention efforts. Data were analyzed from 2000 adult primary care patients aged ≥18 years (56% female) across 5 clinics in the eastern U.S. Participants completed the Alcohol, Smoking and Substance Involvement Screening Test (ASSIST). Prevalence and ASSIST-defined risk-level of tobacco use, alcohol use, and nonmedical/illicit drug use was examined. Multinomial logistic regression models analyzed the demographic correlates of substance use risk-levels. Among the total sample, the prevalence of any past 3-month use was 53.9% for alcohol, 42.0% for tobacco, 24.2% for any illicit/Rx drug, and 5.3% for opioids; the prevalence of ASSIST-defined moderate/high-risk use was 45.1% for tobacco, 29.0% for any illicit/Rx drug, 14.2% for alcohol, and 9.1% for opioids. Differences in the extent and risk-levels of substance use by sex, race/ethnicity, and age group were observed. Adjusted logistic regression showed that male sex, white race, not being married, and having less education were associated with increased odds of moderate/high-risk use scores for each substance category; older ages (versus ages 18-25 years) were associated with increased odds of moderate/high-risk opioid use. Intervention need for problematic substance use was prevalent in this sample. Providers should maintain awareness and screen for problematic substance use more consistently in identified high risk populations.
初级保健机构为识别有问题的物质使用患者和解决未满足的治疗需求提供了重要机会。本研究的目的是检查初级保健患者中按物质特定风险类别划分的有问题的物质使用的程度和相关性,为筛查/干预工作提供信息。 数据来自美国东部 5 家诊所的 2000 名年龄≥18 岁的成年初级保健患者(56%为女性),参与者完成了酒精、吸烟和物质使用参与筛查测试(ASSIST)。检查了烟草使用、酒精使用和非医疗/非法药物使用的发生率和 ASSIST 定义的风险水平。多变量逻辑回归模型分析了物质使用风险水平的人口统计学相关性。 在总样本中,任何过去 3 个月的使用情况包括:酒精为 53.9%,烟草为 42.0%,任何非法/处方药物为 24.2%,阿片类药物为 5.3%;ASSIST 定义的中/高度风险使用情况包括:烟草为 45.1%,任何非法/处方药物为 29.0%,酒精为 14.2%,阿片类药物为 9.1%。观察到性别、种族/族裔和年龄组之间在物质使用的程度和风险水平上存在差异。调整后的逻辑回归显示,男性、白人、未婚和受教育程度较低与每种物质类别的中/高度风险使用评分的几率增加相关;年龄较大(与 18-25 岁年龄组相比)与中/高度风险阿片类药物使用几率增加相关。 在该样本中,有问题的物质使用的干预需求很普遍。提供者应保持警惕,并在确定的高风险人群中更一致地筛查有问题的物质使用。