Place, poverty and prescriptions: a cross-sectional study using Area Deprivation Index to assess opioid use and drug-poisoning mortality in the USA from 2012 to 2017

ObjectiveTo identify the relationships between county-level area deprivation and patterns of both opioid prescriptions and drug-poisoning mortality.Design, setting and participantsFor this retrospective cross-sectional study, we used the IQVIA Xponent data to capture opioid prescriptions and Centres...

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Veröffentlicht in:BMJ open 2020-05, Vol.10 (5), p.e035376
Hauptverfasser: Kurani, Shaheen, McCoy, Rozalina Grubina, Inselman, Jonathan, Jeffery, Molly Moore, Chawla, Sagar, Finney Rutten, Lila J, Giblon, Rachel, Shah, Nilay D
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:ObjectiveTo identify the relationships between county-level area deprivation and patterns of both opioid prescriptions and drug-poisoning mortality.Design, setting and participantsFor this retrospective cross-sectional study, we used the IQVIA Xponent data to capture opioid prescriptions and Centres for Disease Control and Prevention National Vital Statistics System to assess drug-poisoning mortality. The Area Deprivation Index (ADI) is a composite measure of social determinants of health comprised of 17 US census indicators, spanning four socioeconomic domains. For all US counties with available opioid prescription (2712 counties) and drug-poisoning mortality (3133 counties) data between 2012 and 2017, we used negative binomial regression to examine the association between quintiles of county-level ADI and the rates of opioid prescriptions and drug-poisoning mortality adjusted for year, age, race and sex.Primary outcome measuresCounty-level opioid prescription fills and drug-poisoning mortality.ResultsBetween 2012 and 2017, overall rates of opioid prescriptions decreased from 96.6 to 72.2 per 100 people, while the rates of drug-poisoning mortality increased from 14.3 to 22.8 per 100 000 people. Opioid prescription and drug-poisoning mortality rates were consistently higher with greater levels of deprivation. The risk of filling an opioid prescription was 72% higher, and the risk of drug-poisoning mortality was 36% higher, for most deprived compared with the least deprived counties (both p
ISSN:2044-6055
2044-6055
DOI:10.1136/bmjopen-2019-035376