| Literature DB >> 30929641 |
Julaine Allan1,2, Ryan H L Ip3, Michael Kemp4, Nicole Snowdon5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: A substantial increase in substance treatment episodes for methamphetamine problems suggests characteristics of the treatment population could have changed and that targeted treatment programs are required. To determine who methamphetamine treatment should be designed for this study has two aims. First, to empirically describe changes in amphetamine treatment presentations to a rural NSW drug and alcohol treatment agency over time. Second, to examine how these characteristics may affect the likelihood of being treated for amphetamines compared to other drugs.Entities:
Keywords: Amphetamine; Methamphetamine; Rural Australia; Substance treatment
Year: 2019 PMID: 30929641 PMCID: PMC6442410 DOI: 10.1186/s13722-019-0144-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Addict Sci Clin Pract ISSN: 1940-0632
Fig. 1Snapshots of LLW client profiles in the three periods: principal drug of concern (top-left), sex (top-right), age (bottom-left), and Indigenous status (bottom-right)
Characteristics of clients whose principal drug of concern was amphetamine
| Period | 2006/2007 | 2010/2011 | 2015/2016 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Number of episodes | 412 | 257 | 904 |
|
| |||
| Male (%) | 69.7a | 74.7b | 64.8a |
| Female (%) | 30.3b | 25.3a | 35.2b |
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| > 15 and ≤ 30 (%) | 63.3b | 46.3a | 49.7a |
| > 30 and ≤ 45 (%) | 35.0a | 48.6a | 46.2a |
| > 45 and ≤ 60 (%) | 1.7a | 5.1ab | 4.1b |
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| |||
| Yes (%) | 29.4a | 26.5a | 40.0b |
| No (%) | 68.9b | 72.4b | 60.0a |
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| Alone (%) | 32.5 | 25.3 | 28.2 |
| With parents or friends or relatives (%) | 38.3a | 49.4b | 43.4b |
| With spouse/partner and/or child(ren) (%) | 23.8 | 24.1 | 18.0 |
| Unknown/others (%) | 5.3b | 1.2a | 10.4c |
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| |||
| Owned or rented (%) | 77.9a | 89.1b | 79.3a |
| Temporary accommodation or homeless (%) | 20.9b | 10.1a | 11.2a |
| Unknown/others (%) | 1.2a | 0.8a | 9.5b |
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| |||
| Self (%) | 30.1a | 42.8b | 50.8b |
| Legal (%) | 24.3 | 24.9 | 22.8 |
| Health care (%) | 13.6b | 14.8b | 6.6a |
| Other AOD (%) | 19.4b | 10.9a | 10.3a |
| Others (%) | 12.6b | 6.6a | 9.5ab |
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| Not through employment (%) | 91.7b | 89.1ab | 84.6a |
| Through employment (%) | 6.1 | 6.6 | 3.4 |
| No income (%) | 1.0a | 3.9a | 4.8b |
| Unknown (%) | 1.2a | 0.4a | 7.2b |
Significant differences in percentages within a row based on Marascuilo’s multiple comparison at a family-wise error rate of 5% are indicated by different alphabetical letters. The percentages may not sum up to 100 due to either rounding or missing values
Fig. 2Estimated proportion of amphetamine treatment episodes for clients with baseline characteristics by sex and age in 2006/2007 (top-left), 2010/2011 (top-right) and 2015/2016 (bottom)
Effect estimates for non-interacting variables from the logistic regression model
| Odds Ratio | 95% Wald CI | ||
|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||
| Yes | 0.920 | (0.808, 1.047) | 0.207 |
| No | Ref | – | – |
|
| |||
| Alone | 0.923 | (0.785, 1.085) | 0.330 |
| With spouse/partner and/or child(ren) | 1.000 | (0.850, 1.176) | 0.999 |
| Unknown/others | 0.892 | (0.628, 1.267) | 0.522 |
| With parents or friends or relatives | Ref | – | – |
|
| |||
| Temporary accommodation or homeless | 1.815 | (1.473, 2.237) | < 0.001 |
| Unknown/others | 0.683 | (0.464, 1.006) | 0.053 |
| Owned or rented | Ref | – | – |
|
| |||
| Legal | 0.859 | (0.734, 1.005) | 0.057 |
| Health care | 0.777 | (0.632, 0.955) | 0.017 |
| Other AOD | 1.067 | (0.879, 1.294) | 0.512 |
| Others | 0.806 | (0.652, 0.996) | 0.046 |
| Self | Ref | – | – |
|
| |||
| Through employment | 0.357 | (0.276, 0.463) | < 0.001 |
| No income | 1.128 | (0.801, 1.589) | 0.490 |
| Unknown | 0.513 | (0.372, 0.709) | < 0.001 |
| Not through employment | Ref | – | – |
Residual deviance: 7073.1 on 8778 df. See also Additional file 2 for coefficient estimates for variables that interact with other variables. The p values were calculated based on z test