Literature DB >> 20840808

Assessing the prevalence of nonmedical prescription opioid use in the general Canadian population: methodological issues and questions.

Benedikt Fischer1, Nadine Nakamura, Anca Ialomiteanu, Angela Boak, Jürgen Rehm.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To assess the prevalence of nonmedical prescription opioid use (NMPOU) in the Canadian general adult population in the context of rising overall prescription opioid (PO) consumption and related problems in North America.
METHOD: The prevalence of NMPOU was assessed as a multiitem construct in the Canadian Alcohol and Drug Use Monitoring Survey (CADUMS; n = 16 672), an ongoing cross-sectional monthly random digit dialing telephone survey representative of the general Canadian population, aged 15 years and older. CADUMS data were collected between April and December of 2008 with a response rate of 43.5%.
RESULTS: About 22% of CADUMS respondents reported PO use in the last year, while 0.5% reported NMPOU during the same time frame. PO use was significantly higher among women than among men, and highest in the group aged 25 to 54 years. NMPOU was similar among men and women, and highest in the group aged 15 to 24 years.
CONCLUSIONS: CADUMS data indicate an extremely low rate of NMPOU, especially given the levels of overall PO use, other PO-use related problems, and NMPOU levels estimated in the general US population where NMPOU has been assessed to be 10 times higher than in Canada. NMPOU survey item construction and response rates appear to strongly influence and potentially compromise NMPOU survey data. Existing NMPOU data and survey methods need to be validated for this important indicator in Canada, where increasing PO use and problem levels have been recognized as a significant and rising public health problem.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20840808     DOI: 10.1177/070674371005500909

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Can J Psychiatry        ISSN: 0706-7437            Impact factor:   4.356


  10 in total

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4.  High levels of opioid analgesic co-prescription among methadone maintenance treatment clients in British Columbia, Canada: results from a population-level retrospective cohort study.

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5.  Alcohol and illegal drug use behaviors and prescription opioids use: how do nonmedical and medical users compare, and does motive to use really matter?

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6.  Assessing the prevalence of non-medical prescription opioid use in the Canadian general adult population: evidence of large variation depending on survey questions used.

Authors:  Kevin D Shield; Anca Ialomiteanu; Benedikt Fischer; Jürgen Rehm
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7.  Characteristics of opioid-users whose death was related to opioid-toxicity: a population-based study in Ontario, Canada.

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8.  "Nonmedical" prescription opioid use in North America: a call for priority action.

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9.  Chronic Pain Opioid-Maintained Patients Receive Less Analgesic Opioid Prescriptions.

Authors:  Jessica Delorme; Chouki Chenaf; Celian Bertin; Marie Riquelme; Alain Eschalier; Denis Ardid; Nicolas Authier
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10.  Opioid Pain Medication Prescription for Chronic Pain in Primary Care Centers: The Roles of Pain Acceptance, Pain Intensity, Depressive Symptoms, Pain Catastrophizing, Sex, and Age.

Authors:  Carmen Ramírez-Maestre; Ángela Reyes-Pérez; Rosa Esteve; Alicia E López-Martínez; Sonia Bernardes; Mark P Jensen
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  10 in total

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