| Literature DB >> 27927240 |
Nicole Boffin1, Jerome Antoine2, Sarah Moreels2, Simeon Wanyama2, Karin De Ridder2, Lieve Peremans3, Marc Vanmeerbeek4, Viviane Van Casteren2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: General Practitioners (GPs) are well placed to care for patients with (chronic) substance use problems. This pilot was carried out to study the feasibility and usefulness of a continuous surveillance of substance use problems among general practice patients. The objectives were (i) to describe variables with missing values exceeding 1% and whether patients were reported without substance-related problems; (ii) the profile and the magnitude of the patient population that is treated for substance use problems.Entities:
Keywords: Family practice; Substance abuse; Surveillance systems
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27927240 PMCID: PMC5143443 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-016-3885-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Fig. 1Study data flowᅟ
Patient population characteristics by region (N = 479)
| Flanders ( | Wallonia & Brussels ( | Belgium ( | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| n/N | % (95% CI) | n/N | % (95% CI) | n/N | % (95% CI) | |
| Men (versus women) | 177/267 | 66.3 (60.3–71.9) | 138/207 | 66.7 (59.8–73.0) | 315/474 | 66.5 (62.0–70.7) |
| Age in years | ||||||
| <25 | 16/268 | 6.0 (3.5–9.5) | 8/211 | 3.8 (1.7–7.3) | 24/479 | 5.0 (3.2–7.4) |
| 25–34 | 40/268 | 14.9 (10.9–19.8) | 42/211 | 19.9 (14.7–25.9) | 82/479 | 17.1 (13.9–20.8) |
| 35–44 | 50/268 | 18.7 (14.2–23.8) | 46/211 | 21.8 (16.4–28.0) | 96/479 | 20.0 (16.5–23.9) |
| 45–54 | 102/268 | 38.1 (32.2–44.2) | 64/211 | 30.3 (24.2–37.0) | 166/479 | 34.7 (30.4–39.1) |
| 55–64 | 60/268 | 22.4 (17.5–27.9) | 51/211 | 24.2 (18.6–30.5) | 111/479 | 23.2 (19.5–27.2) |
| Type of substance use | ||||||
| Alcohol alone | 142/268 |
| 84/211 |
| 226/479 | 47.2 (42.6–51.8) |
| Prescription drugs | 53/268 | 19.4 (14.8–24.7) | 44/211 | 20.9 (15.6–27.0) | 97/479 | 20.3 (16.5–23.9) |
| Illicit drugs, excluding heroin and methadone | 54/268 | 20.1 (15.5–25.5) | 26/211 | 12.3 (8.2–17.5) | 80/479 | 16.7 (13.5–20.3) |
| Heroin or methadone | 19/268 |
| 57/211 |
| 76/479 | 15.9 (12.7–19.5) |
| Substance use characteristics | ||||||
| Abstinence from substances in last 4 weeks | 108/268 |
| 118/211 |
| 226/479 | 47.2 (42.6–51.8) |
| Single substance use | 178/268 | 66.4 (60.4–72.0) | 127/211 | 60.2 (53.2–61.8) | 305/479 | 63.7 (59.2–68.0) |
| Problematic use ≥10 years | 102/209 |
| 111/164 |
| 213/373 | 57.1 (51.9–62.2) |
| Substance-related problems | ||||||
| Physical problems | 149/268 |
| 84/211 |
| 233/479 | 48.6 (44.1–53.2) |
| Mental problems | 206/268 | 76.9 (71.3–81.8) | 172/211 | 81.5 (75.6–86.5) | 378/479 | 78.9 (75.0–82.5) |
| Problems at work | 61/268 | 22.8 (17.9–28.3) | 30/211 | 14.2 (9.8–19.7) | 91/479 | 19.0 (15.6–22.8) |
| Social problems | 198/268 | 73.9 (68.1–79.0) | 153/211 | 72.5 (59.0–78.4) | 351/479 | 73.3 (69.1–77.2) |
| Occupational status: at work | 114/253 | 45.1 (38.8–51.4) | 66/205 | 32.2 (25.9–39.1) | 180/458 | 39.3 (34.8–43.9) |
| Treatment history | ||||||
| First treatment episode | 66/249 | 26.5 (21.1–32.4) | 39/188 | 20.7 (15.2–27.2) | 105/437 | 24.0 (20.1–28.3) |
| Ongoing treatment episode | 154/254 | 60.6 (54.3–66.7) | 150/210 | 71.4 (64.8–77.4) | 304/464 | 65.5 (61.0–69.8) |
| Treatment status at follow-up | ||||||
| 1) Study drop-out, treatment drop-out or deceaseda | 93/268 | 34.7 (29.0–40.7) | 64/211 | 30.3 (24.2–37.0) | 157/479 | 32.8 (28.6–37.2) |
| 2) Discontinued GP treatment | 91/268 | 34.0 (28.3–40.0) | 48/211 | 22.7 (17.3–29.0) | 139/479 | 29.0 (25.0–33.3) |
| 3) Continued (usual) GP treatment, substance use treatment by non-GP | 19/268 | 7.1 (4.3–10.9) | 9/211 | 4.3 (2.0–7.9) | 28/479 | 5.8 (3.9–8.3) |
| 4) Continued substance use treatment by GP & non-GP | 33/268 | 12.3 (8.6–16.9) | 40/211 | 19.0 (13.9–24.9) | 73/479 | 15.2 (12.1–18.8) |
| 5) Continued substance use treatment by GP alone | 32/268 |
| 50/211 |
| 82/479 | 17.1 (13.9–20.8) |
| Continued GP treatment (total of 3 to 5) | 84/268 |
| 99/211 |
| 183/479 | 38.2 (33.8–42.7) |
| Continued GP substance use treatment (total of 4 and 5) | 65/268 |
| 90/211 |
| 155/479 | 32.4 (28.2–36.8) |
CI Confidence interval. (Borderline) non-overlapping confidence intervals are in bold
a5 of 479 patients were deceased, 2 deaths were caused by substance use
Missing data: gender: n = 5 (1.0%); age: n = 0; substances used: n = 0; length of use: n = 106 (22.1%); occupational status: n = 21 (4.4%); first treatment: n = 42 (8.8%); ongoing treatment episode: n = 15 (3.1%)
Rates of continued GP substance use treatment, respectively by the GP alone or mixed with non-GP treatment, and by the GP alone, according to patient characteristics
| Continued substance use treatment by GP (alone or mixed with non-GP) | Continued substance use treatment by GP alone | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yes ( | No ( | Yes ( | No ( | |||||
| n/N | % (95% CI) | n/N | % (95% CI) | n/N | % (95% CI) | n/N | % (95% CI) | |
| Men (versus women) | 96/154 | 62.3 (54.2–70.0) | 219/320 | 68.4 (63.0–73.5) | 55/82 | 67.0 (55.8–77.1) | 260/392 | 66.3 (61.4–71.0) |
| Age in years | ||||||||
| <25 | 7/155 | 4.5 (1.8–9.1) | 17/324 | 5.2 (3.1–8.3) | 1/82 | 1.2 (0.3–6.6) | 23/397 | 5.8 (3.7–8.6) |
| 25–34 | 22/155 | 14.2 (9.1–20.7) | 60/324 | 18.5 (14.4–23.2) | 4/82 |
|
|
|
| 35–44 | 34/155 | 21.9 (15.7–29.3) | 62/324 | 19.1 (15.0–23.8) | 20/82 | 24.4 (15.6–35.1) | 76/397 | 19.6 (15.9–23.9) |
| 45–54 | 61/155 | 39.4 (31.6–47.5) | 105/324 | 32.4 (27.3–37.8) | 39/82 | 47.6 (36.4–58.9) | 127/397 | 32.0 (27.4–36.8) |
| 55–64 | 31/155 | 20.0 (14.0–27.2) | 80/324 | 24.7 (20.1–29.8) | 18/82 | 22.0 (13.6–32.5) | 93/397 | 23.4 (19.3–27.9) |
| Type of substance use | ||||||||
| Alcohol alone | 64/155 | 41.3 (33.5–49.5) | 162/324 | 50.0 (44.4–55.6) | 33/82 | 40.2 (9.6–51.7) | 193/397 | 48.6 (43.6–53.7) |
| Prescription drugs | 36/155 | 23.2 (16.8–30.7) | 61/324 | 18.5 (14.4–23.2) | 25/82 | 30.5 (20.8–41.6) | 72/397 | 17.9 (14.2–22.0) |
| Illicit drugs, excl. heroin and methadone | 18/155 | 11.6 (7.0–17.7) | 62/324 | 19.1 (15.0–23.8) | 8/82 | 9.8 (4.3–18.3) | 72/397 | 18.1 (14.5–22.3) |
| Heroin or methadone | 37/155 |
| 39/324 |
| 16/82 | 19.5 (11.6–29.7) | 60/397 | 15.1 (11.7–19.0) |
| Substance use characteristics | ||||||||
| Abstinence in last 4 weeks | 76/155 | 49.0 (40.9–57.2) | 150/324 | 46.3 (40.8–51.9) | 44/82 | 53.7 (42.3–64.7) | 182/397 | 45.8 (40.9–50.9) |
| Single substance use | 94/155 | 60.6 (52.5–68.4) | 211/324 | 65.1 (59.7–70.3) | 58/82 | 70.7 (59.6–80.3) | 247/397 | 62.2 (57.2–67.0) |
| Problematic use ≥10 years | 70/155 | 57.9 (48.5–66.8) | 143/324 | 56.7 (50.4–62.9) | 36/82 | 56.3 (43.3–68.6) | 177/309 | 57.3 (51.6–62.9) |
| Substance use related problems | ||||||||
| Physical problems | 71/155 | 45.8 (37.8–54.0) | 162/324 | 50.0 (44.4–55.6) | 37/82 | 45.1 (34.1–56.5) | 196/397 | 49.4 (44.3–54.4) |
| Mental problems | 129/155 | 83.2 (76.4–88.7) | 249/324 | 76.9 (71.9–81.3) | 68/82 | 82.9 (73.0–90.3) | 310/397 | 78.1 (73.7–82.1) |
| Problems at work | 26/155 | 16.8 (11.3–23.6) | 65/324 | 20.1 (15.8–24.8) | 8/82 | 9.8 (4.3–18.3) | 83/397 | 20.9 (17.0–25.2) |
| Social problems | 118/155 | 76.1 (68.6–82.6) | 233/324 | 71.9 (66.7–76.7) | 62/82 | 75.6 (64.9–84.4) | 289/397 | 72.9 (68.1–77.1) |
| Occupational status: at work | 47/155 | 31.5 (24.2–39.7) | 133/309 | 43.0 (37.4–48.8) | 27/82 | 34.6 (24.2–46.2) | 153/380 | 40.3 (35.3–45.4) |
| Treatment history | ||||||||
| First treatment episode | 32/155 | 21.6 (15.3–29.1) | 73/289 | 25.3 (20.4–30.7) | 22/82 | 27.2 (18.3–39.1) | 83/358 | 23.2 (18.9–27.9) |
| Ongoing treatment episode (versus new) | 39/155 |
| 188/309 |
| 20/82 | 75.6 (64.9–84.4) | 242/382 | 63.4 (58.3–68.2) |
| Wallonia-Brussels (versus Flanders) | 90/155 |
| 121/324 |
| 50/82 |
| 161/397 |
|
CI Confidence interval. Non-overlapping confidence intervals are in bold
aThis subpopulation includes all other patients, i.e. dropped-out or deceased patients, patients who discontinued GP treatment and patients who continued usual GP treatment without GP substance use treatment
bThis subpopulation includes all other patients, i.e. dropped-out or deceased patients, patients who discontinued GP treatment, and patients who continued GP treatment combined with non-GP treatment
Adjusted odds ratios for continued substance use treatment by the GP alone or mixed with non-GP treatment (n = 459)
| OR (95% CI) | |
|---|---|
| Median age or older (versus < median) | 1.03 (0.62–1.71) |
| Men (versus women) | 0.79 (0.49–1.29) |
| Type of substance use | |
| Alcohol alone | reference |
| Prescription drugs | 1.40 (0.81–2.42) |
| Illicit drugs, excluding heroin and methadone | 0.85 (0.47–1.51) |
| Heroin or methadone | 1.59 (0.80–3.16) |
| Ongoing treatment episode (versus new) | 1.57 (0.97–2.53) |
| Wallonia-Brussels (versus Flanders) |
|
OR Odds ratio, CI Confidence interval. Non-overlapping confidence intervals are in bold
Adjusted odds ratios for continued substance use treatment by the GP alone in Flandersa (n = 267)
| OR (95% CI) | |
|---|---|
| Median age or older (versus < median) | 2.44 (0.96–6.25) |
| Men (versus women) | 0.82 (0.36–1.87) |
| Type of substance use | |
| Alcohol alone | reference |
| Prescription drugs |
|
| Illicit drugs, excluding heroin and methadone | 0.78 (0.15–4.10) |
| Heroin or methadone |
|
OR Odds ratio, CI Confidence interval. Non-overlapping confidence intervals are in bold
aIn the overall model of determinants of GP treatment alone, there is a significant interaction between region and type of substance use. Modeling determinants in populations split by region resulted in a non-significant model in Wallonia-Brussels (n = 207)