| Literature DB >> 32917213 |
Andreas Kimergård1, Stephen Parkin2, Stacey Jennings3, Eileen Brobbin2, Paolo Deluca2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Tampering of psychoactive medicines presents challenges to regulation and public health. However, little is currently known about what influences the decisions to treat codeine-containing medicines (CCM) with cold water extraction (CWE) from the perspective of individuals employing these techniques. The article identifies factors influencing utilisation of CWE to separate codeine from compounded analgesics, such as paracetamol and ibuprofen, found in CCM.Entities:
Keywords: Codeine; Cold water extraction (CWE); Medicine regulation; Paracetamol Overdose; Tampering
Year: 2020 PMID: 32917213 PMCID: PMC7488478 DOI: 10.1186/s12954-020-00408-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Harm Reduct J ISSN: 1477-7517
Interview questions generating interview data about tampering of CCM
| Questions | Prompts |
|---|---|
| When did you first start taking codeine? | What prompted you to start? What products did you use? Was this prescribed or not? How did it make you feel? What were the effects? What were you thinking/doing? |
| Can you describe your pattern of codeine use over time? | How has your use of codeine changed (increased/ decreased; same/different products?) How do you explain the change of use? |
| Could you tell me about your current use of codeine? | What codeine products do you take and how much? When - time of day? Where? With whom? |
| What are your awareness of potential harm? | |
| Did you ever source information on codeine on the internet? | From where? Why/why not? |
Participant characteristics
| Participants using CCM | Participants using CCM and heroin | All participants | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gender | |||
| Male | 3 (60.0) | 8 (88.9) | 11 (78.6) |
| Female | 2 (40.0) | 1 (11.1) | 3 (21.4) |
| Mean age in years (range) | 29.4 (18–42) | 32.7 (26–38) | 31.5 (18–42) |
| Mean length of time between initial codeine use and last time used in years (range)a | 4.2 (1.5–9) | 9.7 (1–16) | 7.7 (1–16) |
| CWE, route of administration | |||
| Drinking the solution | 2 (40.0) | 4 (44.4) | 6 (42.9) |
| Injecting the solution | 0 (0.0) | 3 (33.3) | 3 (21.4) |
| Snorting crushed codeine tablets | 0 (0.0) | 2 (22.2) | 2 (14.3) |
| CWE, reasons for use | |||
| To make codeine work quicker | 1 (20.0) | 0 (0.0) | 1 (7.1) |
| To feel euphoric | 2 (40.0) | 0 (0.0) | 2 (14.3) |
| To prevent withdrawal symptoms | 1 (20.0) | 2 (22.2) | 3 (21.4) |
aFor participants reporting current use the length of time was calculated as the difference between initial use and the date the interview was conducted
Decisions to utilise CWE across groups of participants (CCM alone versus CCM and heroin)
| Participants using CCM | Participants using CCM and heroin | All participants |
|---|---|---|
| CWE was used to eliminate non-opioid analgesics (paracetamol and ibuprofen) to reduce the risk of paracetamol overdose. | ||
| The many steps involved (including sourcing OTC CCM from multiple pharmacies) made CWE less attractive. | ||
| Cravings outweighed concerns about the ineffectiveness of CWE and triggered utilisation. | ||
| Online information influenced use of CWE (facilitated tampering of psychoactive medicines but also reduced the risk of harm associated with paracetamol overdose). | ||
| Concerns of injecting tablet fillers in solutions containing crushed tablets facilitated use of CWE. | ||
| When stronger codeine (prescription-only CCM) were not accessible, participants treated OTC codeine-containing tablets with CWE. | ||
| Reduced supply of heroin would lead participants to source other types of opioids including utilisation of CWE. |