| Literature DB >> 29302223 |
Theodore J Cicero1, Matthew S Ellis1.
Abstract
Most research designed to answer the "why" of the prescription opioid epidemic has relied on structured interviews, which rigidly attempt to capture the complex reasons people use opioids. In contrast this systematic literature review focuses on peer-reviewed studies that have used a qualitative approach to examine the development of an opioid-use disorder from the point of initial exposure. Rather than simply providing a "high," opioids reportedly relieve psychological/emotional problems or provide an escape from life stressors. As use continues, avoidance of withdrawal sickness becomes an overriding concern, with all other benefits playing minor roles in persistent use. These studies indicate that terms used in structured interviews, such as "nontherapeutic use" or variations thereof, poorly capture the complex range of needs opioids satisfy. Both quantitative/structured studies and more qualitative ones, as well as more focused studies, have an important role in better informing prevention and treatment efforts.Entities:
Keywords: heroin use; prescription opioid abuse; progression of opioid use disorder; qualitative data; qualitative review
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29302223 PMCID: PMC5741109
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Dialogues Clin Neurosci ISSN: 1294-8322 Impact factor: 5.986
Qualitative studies on prescription opioid abuse.[17-33]
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| Back et al (2011) | Interviews, focus groups | 24 adults (12 male, 12 female) with prescription opioid dependance | Newspaper advertisements and flyers posted in local health clinics | Route of administration; motives for use; introduction to prescription opioids; time of use; other substance use |
| Daniulaityte et al (2006) | Interviews | 24 prescription opioid abusers (16 male, 8 female) | Outreach from substance abuse research centers | Initiation to prescription opioids; motives for abuse; patterns of misuse |
| Daniulaityte et al (2012) | Interviews | 47 prescription opioid misusers (25 male, 22 female) with no dependance | Respndent-driven sampling | Drug risks; addiction; overdose and death; organ damage; uncontrollable highs; naturalness and purity; route of administration; harms to the brain; legitimacy and acceptability of use; personal vulnerability and management of pain pill risks |
| Fibbi et al (2012) | Interviews | 34 prescription opioid misusers (25 male, 9 female) denied prescription opioids for the treatment of a pain condition | Natural settings (streets, parks, beaches, and college campuses) | Circumstances for receiving an opioid prescription; circumstances for not obtaining a prescription among ever denied; self-medication; transitions from prescription opioids to heroin |
| Harocopos and Allen (2015) | Focus groups | 19 prescription opioid misusers (14 male, 5 female) | Community health agencies | Initiation to prescription opioids |
| Harocopos and Allen (2016) | Interviews | 31 heroin users (25 male, 6 female) with histories of prescription opioid misuse | Community health agencies, chain referrals, venuebased street recruitment | Trajectories of misuse; dual-entity to single-entity pills; oral to intranasal administration; developing physical dependence; heroin use diffusion; heroin initiation |
| Inciardi et al (2009) | Focus groups | 32 prescription drug abusers (16 male, 16 female) | Substance abuse treatment programs | Sources of prescription drugs; popularity and prices of prescription drugs; prescription drugs as “gateway” drugs |
| Lankenau et al (2012) | Interviews | 50 injection drug users (35 male, 15 female) with history of prescription drug misuse | Targeted sampling, chain referrals | Initiation to prescription opioids; trajectories involving opioids, heroin and injection drug use |
| Mars et al (2014) | Interviews | 41 heroin injectors (21 male, 20 female) | Targeted sampling | Prescription opioid pill sources and distribution; contrasting cities and drug markets; progression from pills; chemical connections; supply-side changes |
| Merlo et al (2013) | Focus groups | 55 physicians (52 male, 3 female) with a history of prescription drug misuse | Physician Health Programs | Motives for prescription drug misuse |
| Momper et al (2011) | Focus groups | 49 American Indian adults and youth (19 male, 30 female); subset of oxycodone users (N=6) | Midwestern Indian Reservation | Oxycodone: levels of use; sources; motives for use; problems and consequences of use; intervention options; worries about barriers to recovery |
| Moore et al (2013) | Interviews | 22 adolescents and young adults (14 male, 8 female) with opioid dependance | Existing Randomized Clinical Trial | Consequences of opioid use; life telescopes; ambivalence/decisional balancing; loss of control and moments of clarity; behavioral therapy and buprenorphine |
| Mui et al (2013) | Interviews | 120 young adults prescription drug misusers (60 male, 60 female) | Key informants, chain referrals | Exposureto prescription drugs; motives for use; access to prescription drugs; setting of use |
| Rigg and Ibanez (2010) | Interviews | 45 prescription drug abusers (26 male, 19 female) | Print media, chain referral, treatment program | Motives for prescription drug abuse |
| Rigg and Murphy (2013) | Interviews | 90 treatment-seeking prescription opioid abusers (52 male, 38 female) | Substance abuse, treatment programs | Family history; motives for use; intiation to prescription drugs |
| St Marie (2014) | Interviews | 34 opioid abusers (20 male, 14 female) with chronic pain | Substance abuse, treatment programs | Chronic pain and addiction |
| Stumbo et al (2017) | Interviews | 121 adults (55 male, 66 female) with prescription opioid dependance | Addiction Medicine department chiefs | Pathwaysto opioid use disorder; treatment-related barriers; stigma of addiction |
Motivations for continued use of prescription opioids.[17,18,21,25-28,30-32,47]
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| I started taking them [codeine tablets] 'cause I'm working hard, long hours, and I'm having leg pains and a back pain, and I'm having cramps real bad. So I started taking the codeine.[ | I realized that when I would go out and hang out with my friends, I wouldn't be afraid to approach girls... I would feel a lot more confident. And I ended up hooking up with girls that sober I wouldn't even approach because I'm a shy kid... There's just something about that confidence... ! sincerely believed that I did things better on opiates.[ | It took me two years to go from a quarter to a whole one but it took me a couple months to go from one to five, six, seven, eight a day... If you're taking that much for that long, you're not even taking it to get high. You don't get high anymore... You just get okay. You can function. And if you don't take, you get really sick, really sick. It was funny, because everybody always thinks they're not going to withdraw. Nobody thinks they're going to withdraw. “Nah, I'll be fine.”[ |
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| I was raped five years ago, and I went through a very bad depression and everything. And I wanted to get messed up. I went to a friend's house. They're like, “oh, these new pills are out, ” and they were just a little blue pill. So cute. You know? It was tiny and blue. It was just to numb myself and what I was going through from being raped.[ | The doctor started giving me pills, and you know, my leg, I was still in pain. It was like a double-edged sword, you know, and then from there I started using heroin, to help me with my pain. And that really helped in the beginning. I would feel no pain for the whole day sometimes. I wound up getting hooked and it took me from living in a house to living on the street. It just destroyed my life. I didn't intend on becoming a junkie, I didn't intend on catching the habit-nothing like that. I just wanted to get the pain over with, but it was so excruciating. That's what happened like a downward spiral, everything from there just went down.[ |
| When I came home there was a huge argument and... from my head to my toes I wanted nothing more than to get high, and I knew that once I got high I would be able to deal with the situation in a better way.[ | After my son died [unexpectedly], I hit the [hydrocodone/acetaminophen] pretty hard... the prescription was for four a day... for pain. And I was taking quite a bit more than that. You know, I was self-medicating... it just kind of numbed me to what was going on around me. I was able to kind of deal with my wife and her problems, and everything else.[ | If I didn't have it in my system, I was throwing up, I was extremely sick... If I didn't have the [oxycodone hydrochloride] or the [oxycodone] or the methadone, I was dope sick... I thought I was going to have a heart attack. Your heart races, you're shaking... as long as I had it in my system I was okay.[ |
| There ain't nothing to do. And I think that's why we, a lot of us do them because we're so unhappy in our relationships and with our lives.[ | They made me feel better-it took the pain away, 'cause I lost my mom, and my father, and my sister in the same year, and I was hurting at the time... [ | [Withdrawal] is like experiencing what it might be like to be insane... I totally hated it, and I wanted to use drugs so I wouldn't feel it.[ |
| For escape and relief for myself. I don't know why I get very depressed a lot of times. Escape is always a part of it for me. You know? I have a lot of problems out there. I have a lot of issues out there. I'm always looking over my shoulder. I have people calling my mother's house saying they're going to cut my throat. I have, you know a fiancée that's pregnant who her health problems far exceed mine. So that's nerve-wracking. Just through this drug use—the amount of people I've lost. I have had a girlfriend die in my arms—things like that. I want to escape those feelings.[ | Drugs treated a rather overwhelming anxiety and not being comfortable in my own skin, being shy, being uncomfortable around other people, being worried all the time about things, just an angst and malaise that, fortunately, I no longer have.[ | So we started doing them [oxycodone hydrochloride], and we, like, got so high. It was, like, the best high, and so we kept going back and getting more and more. I just wanted them 'cause I liked the high from them, but then it became about maintaining.[ |
| It helps mentally... your mind's thinking of other things and you don't' have time to sit and maybe dwell on things you shouldn't be... it helps.[ | It just kills everything. It even numbs your mind—to um sad things or emotional things.[ | So I wouldn't have withdrawals. I hated taking them so much to that point that I started to cry every time I took a hit.[ |