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The added risk of opioid problem use among treatment‐seeking youth with marijuana and/or alcohol problem use
Author(s) -
Subramaniam Geetha A.,
Ives Melissa L.,
Stitzer Maxine L.,
Dennis Michael L.
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
addiction
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.424
H-Index - 193
eISSN - 1360-0443
pISSN - 0965-2140
DOI - 10.1111/j.1360-0443.2009.02829.x
Subject(s) - psychiatry , substance abuse , psychological intervention , medicine , mental health , comorbidity , clinical psychology , psychology
Objectives  To determine the added risk of opioid problem use (OPU) in youth with marijuana/alcohol problem use (MAPU). Methods  A total of 475 youth (ages 14–21 years) with OPU + MAPU were compared to a weighted sample of 475 youth with MAPU only (i.e. no OPU) before and after propensity score matching on gender, age, race, level of care and weekly use of marijuana/alcohol. Youth were recruited from 88 drug treatment sites participating in eight Center for Substance Abuse Treatment‐funded grants. At treatment intake, participants were administered the Global Appraisal of Individual Need to elicit information on demographic, social, substance, mental health, human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), physical and legal characteristics. Odds ratios with confidence intervals were calculated. Results  The added risk of OPU among MAPU youth was associated with greater comorbidity; higher rates of psychiatric symptoms and trauma/victimization; greater needle use and sex‐related HIV risk behaviours; and greater physical distress. The OPU + MAPU group was less likely to be African American or other race and more likely to be aged 15–17 years, Caucasian; report weekly drug use at home and among peers; engage in illegal behaviors and be confined longer; have greater substance abuse severity and polydrug use; and use mental health and substance abuse treatment services. Conclusions  These findings expand upon the existing literature and highlight the substantial incremental risk of OPU on multiple comorbid areas among treatment‐seeking youth. Further evaluation is needed to assess their outcomes following standard drug treatment and to evaluate specialized interventions for this subgroup of severely impaired youth.

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