Characterizing the intersection of Co-occurring risk factors for illicit drug abuse and dependence in a U.S. nationally representative sample

Few studies have attempted to characterize how co-occurring risk factors for substance use disorders intersect. A recent study examined this question regarding cigarette smoking and demonstrated that co-occurring risk factors generally act independently. The present study examines whether that same...

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Veröffentlicht in:Preventive medicine 2016-11, Vol.92, p.118-125
Hauptverfasser: Kurti, Allison N., Keith, Diana R., Noble, Alyssa, Priest, Jeff S., Sprague, Brian, Higgins, Stephen T.
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container_end_page 125
container_issue
container_start_page 118
container_title Preventive medicine
container_volume 92
creator Kurti, Allison N.
Keith, Diana R.
Noble, Alyssa
Priest, Jeff S.
Sprague, Brian
Higgins, Stephen T.
description Few studies have attempted to characterize how co-occurring risk factors for substance use disorders intersect. A recent study examined this question regarding cigarette smoking and demonstrated that co-occurring risk factors generally act independently. The present study examines whether that same pattern of independent intersection of risk factors extends to illicit drug abuse/dependence using a U.S. nationally representative sample (National Survey on Drug Use and Health, 2011–2013). Logistic regression and classification and regression tree (CART) modeling were used to examine risk of past-year drug abuse/dependence associated with a well-established set of risk factors for substance use (age, gender, race/ethnicity, education, poverty, smoking status, alcohol abuse/dependence, mental illness). Each of these risk factors was associated with significant increases in the odds of drug abuse/dependence in univariate logistic regressions. Each remained significant in a multivariate model examining all eight risk factors simultaneously. CART modeling of these 8 risk factors identified subpopulation risk profiles wherein drug abuse/dependence prevalence varied from 80% corresponding to differing combinations of risk factors present. Alcohol abuse/dependence and cigarette smoking had the strongest associations with drug abuse/dependence risk. These results demonstrate that co-occurring risk factors for illicit drug/abuse dependence generally intersect in the same independent manner as risk factors for cigarette smoking, underscoring further fundamental commonalities across these different types of substance use disorders. These results also underscore the fundamental importance of differences in the presence of co-occurring risk factors when considering the often strikingly different prevalence rates of illicit drug abuse/dependence in U.S. population subgroups. •Study of co-occurring risk factors for illicit drug abuse/dependence in U.S. adults•Eight risk factors were each independently associated with illicit drug abuse/dependence.•Alcohol abuse/dependence was most strongly associated with illicit drug use disorders.•Effects of risk factors for illicit drug use are not conditional on the presence of the others.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.ypmed.2016.09.030
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source MEDLINE; Elsevier ScienceDirect Journals
subjects Adult
Adults
Aged
Alcoholism - epidemiology
Classification and regression tree (CART)
Co-occurring risk factors
Continental Population Groups
Ethnic Groups
Female
Humans
Illicit drug abuse and dependence
Male
Middle Aged
Multiple logistic regression
Prevalence
Risk Factors
Smoking - epidemiology
Street Drugs
Substance use disorders
Substance-Related Disorders - epidemiology
Surveys and Questionnaires
U.S. nationally representative sample
United States - epidemiology
title Characterizing the intersection of Co-occurring risk factors for illicit drug abuse and dependence in a U.S. nationally representative sample
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