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Erschienen in: Journal of Urban Health 6/2012

01.12.2012

Patterns of Prescription Drug Misuse among Young Injection Drug Users

verfasst von: Stephen E. Lankenau, Michelle Teti, Karol Silva, Jennifer Jackson Bloom, Alex Harocopos, Meghan Treese

Erschienen in: Journal of Urban Health | Ausgabe 6/2012

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Abstract

Misuse of prescription drugs and injection drug use has increased among young adults in the USA. Despite these upward trends, few studies have examined prescription drug misuse among young injection drug users (IDUs). A qualitative study was undertaken to describe current patterns of prescription drug misuse among young IDUs. Young IDUs aged 16–25 years who had misused a prescription drug, e.g., opioids, tranquilizers, or stimulants, at least three times in the past 3 months were recruited in 2008 and 2009 in Los Angeles (n = 25) and New York (n = 25). Informed by an ethno-epidemiological approach, descriptive data from a semi-structured interview guide were analyzed both quantitatively and qualitatively. Most IDUs sampled were both homeless and transient. Heroin, prescription opioids, and prescription tranquilizers were frequently misused in the past 30 days. Qualitative results indicated that young IDUs used prescription opioids and tranquilizers: as substitutes for heroin when it was unavailable; to boost a heroin high; to self-medicate for health conditions, including untreated pain and heroin withdrawal; to curb heroin use; and to reduce risks associated with injecting heroin. Polydrug use involving heroin and prescription drugs resulted in an overdose in multiple cases. Findings point to contrasting availability of heroin in North American cities while indicating broad availability of prescription opioids among street-based drug users. The results highlight a variety of unmet service needs among this sample of young IDUs, such as overdose prevention, drug treatment programs, primary care clinics, and mental health services.
Fußnoten
1
IDUs in the studies of Lankenau and colleagues12,16 ranged in age from 16 to 29 years, i.e., young IDUs, while IDUs included in Firestone and Fischer’s study15 ranged in age from 18 to 50 years and in the study of Roy et al.17 from 18 to 60 years.
 
2
Several of these qualitative studies3539 did not focus on IDUs, but include descriptions of prescription drug misuse.
 
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Metadaten
Titel
Patterns of Prescription Drug Misuse among Young Injection Drug Users
verfasst von
Stephen E. Lankenau
Michelle Teti
Karol Silva
Jennifer Jackson Bloom
Alex Harocopos
Meghan Treese
Publikationsdatum
01.12.2012
Verlag
Springer US
Erschienen in
Journal of Urban Health / Ausgabe 6/2012
Print ISSN: 1099-3460
Elektronische ISSN: 1468-2869
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11524-012-9691-9

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