| Literature DB >> 33664282 |
Xin Chen1, Wei Hou2, Sina Rashidian3, Yu Wang3, Xia Zhao4, George Stuart Leibowitz5, Richard N Rosenthal6, Mary Saltz1,7, Joel H Saltz1, Elinor Randi Schoenfeld2, Fusheng Wang8,9.
Abstract
Opioid overdose related deaths have increased dramatically in recent years. Combating the opioid epidemic requires better understanding of the epidemiology of opioid poisoning (OP). To discover trends and patterns of opioid poisoning and the demographic and regional disparities, we analyzed large scale patient visits data in New York State (NYS). Demographic, spatial, temporal and correlation analyses were performed for all OP patients extracted from the claims data in the New York Statewide Planning and Research Cooperative System (SPARCS) from 2010 to 2016, along with Decennial US Census and American Community Survey zip code level data. 58,481 patients with at least one OP diagnosis and a valid NYS zip code address were included. Main outcome and measures include OP patient counts and rates per 100,000 population, patient level factors (gender, age, race and ethnicity, residential zip code), and zip code level social demographic factors. The results showed that the OP rate increased by 364.6%, and by 741.5% for the age group > 65 years. There were wide disparities among groups by race and ethnicity on rates and age distributions of OP. Heroin and non-heroin based OP rates demonstrated distinct temporal trends as well as major geospatial variation. The findings highlighted strong demographic disparity of OP patients, evolving patterns and substantial geospatial variation.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33664282 PMCID: PMC7933431 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-84148-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379