Tuesday, December 15, 2015

Study finds 3/4 of high school heroin users started with prescription opioids

http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2015-12/nyu-nsf120315.php

Public Release: 3-Dec-2015
NYU study finds 3/4 of high school heroin users started with prescription opioids
Nearly 25% High school seniors who misused prescription opioids more than 40 times, also used heroin
New York University

Nonmedical use of prescription opioids (a.k.a.: pain-killers, narcotics) such as Vicodin, Percocet, and Oxycontin has become increasingly problematic in recent years with increases nation-wide in overdoses, hospital treatment admissions, and deaths. Use also appears to be contributing to heroin initiation, which has increased in recent years, as the demographics of users are shifting. Those previously at low risk -- women, whites, and individuals of higher income -- are now using at unprecedented rates.

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"12.4% of students reported lifetime nonmedical opioid use and 1.2% reported lifetime heroin use," said Dr. Palamar. "As frequency of lifetime opioid use increased, so too did the odds for reporting heroin use, with over three-quarters of heroin users reporting lifetime nonmedical opioid use. More frequent and more recent nonmedical opioid use was associated with increased odds for reporting heroin use."

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Recent (last 30-day) opioid use was also a robust risk factor for heroin use. Almost a quarter (23.2%) of students who reported using opioids >40 times reported lifetime heroin use. Females and students residing with two parents were consistently at low odds for reporting use of opioids and heroin; black and Hispanic students were less likely to report opioid or heroin use than white students.

"Interestingly, said, co-author Pedro Mateu-Gelabert, PhD, a principal investigator with CDUHR, "while we found that black and Hispanic students were at low risk for both opioid and heroin use generally, black and Hispanic students were more likely to use heroin without first using opioids in a nonmedical manner. This suggests that it is primarily the white students who may be transitioning from pill use to heroin."

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Dr. Palamar goes on to point out that a good number of teens are not educated about prescription opioids. Teens may think they're safe because they're government approved, pharmaceutical grade, and easily found in their parents' medicine cabinet.

"A teen may take an Oxy a couple of times and remain unscathed," he said. "But a lot of teens don't realize these pills can be physically addicting. A lot of teens don't trust warnings about the harm prescription opioids can cause because they're taught that using any drug -- even marijuana -- even once -- will ruin their life forever."

The researchers emphasize that nonmedical opioid use can and does place teens at serious risk -- for accidental overdose and for dependence.

"Teens experimenting with pills need to look at all of these people around them becoming addicted to--and dying from heroin," says Dr. Palamar. "Most of these people started on pills and felt they had no choice but to move onto heroin. Targeting this group may prevent future heroin initiation, and decrease the troubling trend nation-wide in opiate-related deaths."

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