The purpose of this study was to compare demographic,
clinical, and survival characteristics of drug-using safety-net primary care
patients who used or did not use opioids, and to examine treatment implications
of our findings.
The sample consisted of 868 adults who reported illicit drug
use in the 90 days before study enrollment, 396 (45.6%) of whom were opioid users.
Multiple measures indicated that, as a group, opioid users
were
- less physically and psychiatrically healthy than drug users who did not endorse using opioids,
- and were heavy users of medical services (eg, emergency departments, inpatient hospitals, and outpatient medical) at considerable public expense.
- After adjusting for age, they were 2.61 times more likely to die in the 1 to 5 years after study enrollment
- and more likely to die from accidental poisoning than nonopioid users.
- Subgroup analyses suggested patients using any nonprescribed opioids had more serious drug problems including more intravenous drug use
- and greater HIV risk than patients using opioids only as prescribed.
Via: http://ht.ly/T0aLb
By: Ries R1, Krupski A, West II, Maynard C, Bumgardner K, Donovan D, Dunn C, Roy-Byrne P.
- 1Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences (RR, AK, IIW, KB, DD, CD, PRB), University of Washington at Harborview Medical Center, Seattle, WA; Department of Health Services (CM), University of Washington School of Public Health, Seattle, WA; and Alcohol and Drug Abuse Institute (DD), University of Washington, Seattle, WA.
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