Literature DB >> 10342805

Validity of drug use reporting in a high-risk community sample: a comparison of cocaine and heroin survey reports with hair tests.

M Fendrich1, T P Johnson, S Sudman, J S Wislar, V Spiehler.   

Abstract

Hair specimens were collected from 322 subjects and analyzed as part of an experimental study administering household surveys during 1997 to a high-risk community sample of adults from Chicago, Illinois. Toxicologic results were compared with survey responses about recent and lifetime drug use. About 35% of the sample tested positive for cocaine, and 4% tested positive for heroin. Sample prevalence estimates of cocaine use based on toxicologic results were nearly five times the survey-based estimates of past month use and nearly four times the survey-based estimates of past year use. With the hair test results as the standard, cocaine and heroin use were considerably underreported in the survey. Underreporting was more of a problem for cocaine than for heroin. Among those who tested positive, survey disclosure of cocaine use was associated with higher levels of cocaine detected in hair. In general, when recent drug use was reported, it was usually detected in hair. When a drug was detected in hair, use was usually not reported in the survey. When heroin was detected in hair, cocaine was almost always detected as well.

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Year:  1999        PMID: 10342805     DOI: 10.1093/oxfordjournals.aje.a009740

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Epidemiol        ISSN: 0002-9262            Impact factor:   4.897


  34 in total

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5.  Inconsistencies in self-reported drug use by adolescents in substance abuse treatment: implications for outcome and performance measurements.

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8.  Illicit drug use, hypertension, and chronic kidney disease in the US adult population.

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9.  Hair drug testing results and self-reported drug use among primary care patients with moderate-risk illicit drug use.

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