Health Behavior and Health Education, Fay W. Boozman College of Public Health, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, 4301W. Markham, Little Rock, AR 72205, USA; Southern Public Health and Criminal Justice Research Center, Fay W. Boozman College of Public Health, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, 4301W. Markham, Little Rock, AR 72205, USA.
Department of Biomedical Informatics, College of Medicine, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, 4301W. Markham, Little Rock, AR 72205, USA; Center for Mental Healthcare and Outcomes Research, Central Arkansas Veterans Healthcare System, 2200 Fort Roots Drive, North Little Rock, AR 72114, USA.
Drug Alcohol Depend. 2022 Aug 1;237:109535. doi: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2022.109535. Epub 2022 Jun 9.
Methamphetamine use disorder has increased rapidly in the past decade. Injecting is also increasing and has multifaceted implications for disease severity, overall health, and treatment outcomes, but less is known about where or among whom injecting has shifted the most. This national study assessed temporal changes in the preferred route of methamphetamine administration by race/ethnicity and within urban/rural geographies.
We used the Treatment Episode Dataset-Discharges (2010-2019) to identify outpatient treatment cases who reported methamphetamine as their primary drug of choice at admission (N = 531,799; 2010 n = 33,744; 2019 n = 81,885). We created a combined variable indicating race/ethnicity and the rural/urban location of treatment, and used logistic regression to model the predicted probability of cases reporting injection, smoking, or snorting as their preferred route of administration. We included an interaction term to determine differences over time (race/ethnicity/rurality*year).
Across all years, smoking methamphetamine was the most common route of administration (66%), followed by injection (24%) and snorting (10%). Over time and among most sub-groups, the rates of injection increased while the rates of smoking decreased. Compared to 2010, the odds of injecting methamphetamine in 2019 were highest among Black cases in urban areas (aOR = 2.30, 95% CI = 1.76-3.00, p < 0.0001).
Increasing methamphetamine injection was most pronounced among Black treatment cases in more urban areas, which is in contrast to the longstanding narrative that methamphetamine is a White and rural drug. Methamphetamine prevention, treatment, and harm reduction should target populations with high injection prevalence and growing incidence.
在过去十年中,冰毒使用障碍迅速增加。注射冰毒的情况也在增加,这对疾病严重程度、整体健康和治疗结果都有多方面的影响,但人们对注射冰毒的地点或人群变化知之甚少。本项全国性研究评估了种族/民族和城乡地理位置内冰毒首选给药途径的时间变化。
我们使用治疗发作数据集-出院记录(2010-2019 年),识别出在入院时报告冰毒为首选药物的门诊治疗病例(N=531799;2010 年 n=33744;2019 年 n=81885)。我们创建了一个综合变量,指示种族/民族和治疗的城乡地理位置,并使用逻辑回归来对报告注射、吸烟或鼻吸作为首选给药途径的病例的预测概率进行建模。我们包括一个交互项,以确定随时间的差异(种族/民族/城乡*年份)。
在所有年份中,吸食冰毒是最常见的给药途径(66%),其次是注射(24%)和鼻吸(10%)。随着时间的推移,在大多数亚组中,注射冰毒的比例增加,而吸烟的比例下降。与 2010 年相比,2019 年在城市地区的黑人病例中注射冰毒的几率最高(调整后的优势比[aOR]=2.30,95%置信区间[CI]=1.76-3.00,p<0.0001)。
在更多城市地区的黑人治疗病例中,冰毒注射量的增加最为明显,这与冰毒是白人和农村地区毒品的长期说法形成了对比。冰毒预防、治疗和减少伤害应针对注射流行率高和发病率不断上升的人群。