Miller J D
NIDA Res Monogr. 1985;57:104-24.
Over the years, nominative estimates of heroin prevalence have been consistently higher than self-reports of heroin use. During this time, nominative data have generally followed mainstream patterns of drug use: nominative estimates for young adults and for males are higher than nominative estimates for older persons, youth, and females; moreover, the recent downward trends in drug use have been replicated by the nominative heroin data. Thus, the overall picture presented by the nominative data--similar patterns but higher levels of prevalence--seems to support the validity of the new approach. Nevertheless, considerable caution should be exercised in interpreting nominative data. This is chiefly because a substantial minority of nominators cannot report the number of other close friends of the heroin user who also "know." While missing data has been handled by a conservative imputation rule, the fact that so many persons are unable to provide an answer to this key question casts doubt on the accuracy of the answers that were given. In fact, the nominative approach might tend to produce over-estimates, because of the potential for undercounts of the numbers of others who "know." Additional tests of validity should be performed, such as application of the nominative approach to nonsensitive behaviors or minimally sensitive behaviors, such as marijuana use or perhaps cocaine use. Certainly, the overall validity of the nominative heroin data would be supported if in future surveys new nominative heroin estimates for relatively unstigmatized forms of drug use proved to be similar to self-reported levels of use, thus pointing to the unique difference in estimates that might be observed for heroin. Finally, in interpreting the heroin estimates presented here, it should be remembered that both the nominative and self-report estimates refer to heroin use in the household population of the United States. Thus, many heroin addicts and other users who reside in various unconventional living arrangements would not be included in the counts presented here. Among the excluded groups are transients residing in rooming houses or "crashing" in the home of one "friend" after another or who are incarcerated in jails or confined to residential drug treatment centers. This is a caution for interpreting the estimates presented in this paper, not a criticism of the nominative technique itself.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
多年来,对海洛因流行率的提名估计一直高于海洛因使用的自我报告。在此期间,提名数据总体上遵循了主流吸毒模式:对年轻人和男性的提名估计高于对老年人、青年人和女性的提名估计;此外,吸毒最近的下降趋势也在提名海洛因数据中得到体现。因此,提名数据呈现的总体情况——模式相似但流行率更高——似乎支持了新方法的有效性。然而,在解释提名数据时应格外谨慎。这主要是因为相当一部分提名者无法报告海洛因使用者其他也“知晓”的亲密朋友的数量。虽然缺失数据已通过保守的插补规则处理,但如此多的人无法回答这个关键问题这一事实,让人对所给出答案的准确性产生怀疑。事实上,提名方法可能倾向于产生高估,因为存在“知晓”他人数量漏报的可能性。应该进行额外的有效性测试,比如将提名方法应用于非敏感行为或敏感度最低的行为,如使用大麻或可能使用可卡因。当然,如果在未来的调查中,对相对不那么受污名化的吸毒形式的新提名海洛因估计与自我报告的使用水平相似,从而指出海洛因估计可能存在的独特差异,那么提名海洛因数据的总体有效性将得到支持。最后,在解释此处呈现的海洛因估计时,应该记住,提名估计和自我报告估计都指的是美国家庭人口中的海洛因使用情况。因此,许多居住在各种非传统生活安排中的海洛因成瘾者和其他使用者不会被包括在此处呈现的统计数据中。被排除的群体包括居住在寄宿公寓的暂住者,或在一个又一个“朋友”家中“借住”的人,或被监禁在监狱或被限制在住院戒毒治疗中心的人。这是对解释本文所呈现估计的一个提醒,而非对提名技术本身的批评。(摘要截选至400字)