Columbia: Balancing a country’s need to make prescription drugs available to those
in need while simultaneously curbing nonmedical use is one of our
greatest challenges, according to a perspective article just published
by Silvia Martins, MD, PhD, associate professor of Epidemiology at Columbia University’s Mailman School of Public Health and a colleague at American University of Beirut. The article published in World Psychiatry,
the journal of the World Psychiatric Association, cites research
finding increased rates of deaths worldwide from prescription opioids as
high as 550 percent depending on country and time-period. For example,
from 2000 to 2014, there was a 200 percent increase in overdose deaths
due to opioid use.
The researchers reported on data from school-
and college-based surveys from Europe, Latin America, Asia, and the
Middle East. In the U.S., they summarized information from data
collected from the 2014 National Survey on Drug Use and Health.
In
Beirut, past-year nonmedical use of any prescription drugs was 22
percent among private university students, and 10 percent among high
school students, with prescription opioids the drug of choice. ). In the
Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, a recent school-based survey showed a lifetime
prevalence of 7 percent for the nonmedical use of any prescription
drug.
In Europe, three-quarters of overdose deaths and 3.5
percent of total deaths among 15 to 39 year olds were attributed to
prescription opioids. Data from 36 countries collected as part of the
most recent 2011 European School Survey Project on Alcohol and other
Drugs showed that, on average, 6 percent of European school students
(mean age of 16 years) reported lifetime nonmedical use of
tranquilizers.
“While there are variations in study
methodologies and definitions of what constitutes nonmedical use, direct
comparisons are also affected by the varied availability and cultural
acceptance of the drugs worldwide,” said Dr. Martins. “The greater
‘social acceptance’ for using these medications (versus illegal drugs)
and the misconception that they are ‘safe’ may be contributing factors
to their misuse.”
One study from Southern China conducted in
2007-2009 revealed that 6 percent of the middle and high school students
had tried a prescription medication non-medically, mostly opioids,
followed by cough medicine with codeine. In Chongqing, China, a 2012
high school survey reported a lifetime prevalence of 11 percent for just
the nonmedical use of prescription opioids.
In the U.S., past-year prevalence of nonmedical use of prescription drugs—
opioids,
stimulants, tranquilizers and sedatives—was reported by 6 percent of 12
to 17 year-olds and just under 12 percent of 18 to 25 year-olds, mainly
driven by the misuse of opioids. Data from the latest U.S. school and
college– based surveys show that 13 percent of 12th graders used any
prescription drugs non-medically.
Nonmedical prescription drug
use is defined as using without a prescription or for reasons other than
what the medication is intended for. It is a global concern primarily
driven by the high and rising nonmedical use of prescription opioids in
young populations. Nonmedical use of prescription stimulants can cause
respiratory suppression and overdose, or lead to irregular heart rate,
hypertension, cardiovascular system failure, stroke, and seizures.
Nonmedical use of both prescription opioids and stimulants among
adolescents and young adults have also been linked to increased harmful
use of other substances, psychiatric symptoms, psychiatric disorders,
and ideas of suicide.
Dr. Martins suggests the following
measures be taken to help ensure that these prescription drugs are
available to those who need it while strictly avoiding diversion for
nonmedical purposes:
1. Inform the general
public, including parents and youth, about the negative consequences of
sharing prescription medications.
2. Train medical practitioners to better recognize patients at potential risk of developing nonmedical use.
3.
Consider potential alternative treatments and improve monitoring the
medications medical professionals dispense.