Department of Behavioral and Social Sciences, Brown University School of Public Health, 121 South Main Street, Providence, RI, 02912, USA.
Department of Epidemiology, Brown University School of Public Health, 121 South Main Street, Providence, RI, 02912, USA.
BMC Public Health. 2024 Aug 27;24(1):2325. doi: 10.1186/s12889-024-19779-x.
In recent years, overdoses involving illicit cocaine, methamphetamine, and other stimulants have increased in the U.S. The unintentional consumption of stimulants containing illicit fentanyl is a major risk factor for overdoses, particularly in Massachusetts and Rhode Island. Understanding the drug use patterns and strategies used by people who use stimulants (PWUS) to prevent overdose is necessary to identify risk and protective factors for stimulant and opioid-involved overdoses. Mixed-methods research with people who distribute drugs (PWDD) can also provide critical information into the mechanisms through which fentanyl may enter the stimulant supply, and the testing of drug samples can further triangulate PWUS and PWDD perspectives regarding the potency and adulteration of the drug supply. These epidemiological methods can inform collaborative intervention development efforts with community leaders to identify feasible, acceptable, and scalable strategies to prevent fatal and non-fatal overdoses in high-risk communities.
Our overall objective is to reduce stimulant and opioid-involved overdoses in regions disproportionately affected by the overdose epidemic. To meet this long-term objective, we employ a multi-pronged approach to identify risk and protective factors for unintentional stimulant and opioid-involved overdoses among PWUS and use these findings to develop a package of locally tailored intervention strategies that can be swiftly implemented to prevent overdoses. Specifically, this study aims to [1] Carry out mixed-methods research with incarcerated and non-incarcerated people who use or distribute illicit stimulants to identify risk and protective factors for stimulant and opioid-involved overdoses; [2] Conduct drug checking to examine the presence and relative quantity of fentanyl and other adulterants in the stimulant supply; and [3] Convene a series of working groups with community stakeholders involved in primary and secondary overdose prevention in Massachusetts and Rhode Island to contextualize our mixed-methods findings and identify multilevel intervention strategies to prevent stimulant-involved overdoses.
Completion of this study will yield a rich understanding of the social epidemiology of stimulant and opioid-involved overdoses in addition to community-derived intervention strategies that can be readily implemented and scaled to prevent such overdoses in two states disproportionately impacted by the opioid and overdose crises: Massachusetts and Rhode Island.
近年来,美国涉及非法可卡因、冰毒和其他兴奋剂的过量用药有所增加。意外摄入含有非法芬太尼的兴奋剂是导致过量用药的一个主要风险因素,尤其是在马萨诸塞州和罗得岛州。了解使用兴奋剂者(PWUS)预防过量用药的用药模式和策略,对于确定与兴奋剂和阿片类药物相关的过量用药的风险和保护因素是必要的。与毒品分发者(PWDD)合作的混合方法研究也可以提供关键信息,了解芬太尼可能进入兴奋剂供应的机制,以及对药物样本的测试可以进一步从 PWUS 和 PWDD 的角度了解药物供应的效力和掺杂物。这些流行病学方法可以为与社区领导人合作制定预防高危社区内致命和非致命性过量用药的合作干预措施提供信息,以确定可行、可接受和可扩展的策略。
我们的总体目标是减少受过量用药流行影响不成比例的地区的兴奋剂和阿片类药物相关的过量用药。为了实现这一长期目标,我们采用多管齐下的方法,确定 PWUS 中意外使用兴奋剂和阿片类药物相关的过量用药的风险和保护因素,并利用这些发现制定一套针对当地的干预策略,以迅速实施预防过量用药。具体而言,本研究旨在:[1] 对被监禁和未被监禁的使用或分发非法兴奋剂的人员进行混合方法研究,以确定与兴奋剂和阿片类药物相关的过量用药的风险和保护因素;[2] 进行药物检测,以检查兴奋剂供应中芬太尼和其他掺杂物的存在和相对数量;[3] 在马萨诸塞州和罗得岛州召集一系列与原发性和继发性过量预防有关的社区利益攸关方工作组,使我们的混合方法研究结果具有背景意义,并确定预防兴奋剂相关过量用药的多层次干预策略。
完成这项研究将使我们深入了解兴奋剂和阿片类药物相关过量用药的社会流行病学,以及可以在两个受阿片类药物和过量用药危机影响不成比例的州(马萨诸塞州和罗得岛州)迅速实施和扩大的社区衍生干预策略。