Abstract
AbstractThe ongoing opioid epidemic has been a global concern for years, increasingly due to its heavy toll on young people’s lives and prospects. Few studies have investigated trends in use of the wider range of drugs prescribed to alleviate pain, psychological distress and insomnia in children, adolescents and young adults. Our aim was to study dispensation as a proxy for use of prescription analgesics, anxiolytics and hypnotics across age groups (0–29 years) and sex over the last 15 years in a large, representative general population. The study used data from a nationwide prescription database, which included information on all drugs dispensed from any pharmacy in Norway from 2004 through 2019. Age-specific trends revealed that the prevalence of use among children and adolescents up to age 14 was consistently low, with the exception of a substantial increase in use of melatonin from age 5. From age 15–29, adolescents and young adults used more prescription drugs with increasing age at all time points, especially analgesics and drugs with higher potential for misuse. Time trends also revealed that children from age 5 were increasingly dispensed melatonin over time, while adolescents from age 15 were increasingly dispensed analgesics, including opioids, gabapentinoids and paracetamol. In contrast, use of benzodiazepines and z-hypnotics slightly declined in young adults over time. Although trends were similar for both sexes, females used more prescription drugs than their male peers overall. The upsurge in use of prescription analgesics, anxiolytics and hypnotics among young people is alarming.Trial registrationThe study is part of the overarching Killing Pain project. The rationale behind the Killing Pain research was pre-registered through ClinicalTrials.gov on April 7, 2020. Registration number NCT04336605;https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/record/NCT04336605.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Developmental and Educational Psychology,General Medicine,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health
Reference58 articles.
1. Alzahrani H, Mackey M, Stamatakis E, Zadro JR, Shirley D (2019) The association between physical activity and low back pain: a systematic review and meta-analysis of observational studies. Sci Rep 9:1–10
2. Bachman JG, Schulenberg JE, Freedman-Doan P, O’Malley PM, Johnston LD, Messersmith EE (2008) The education-drug use connection: How successes and failures in school relate to adolescent smoking, drinking, drug use, and delinquency. Psychology Press, London
3. Bell J, Paget SP, Nielsen TC, Buckley NA, Collins J, Pearson S-A, Nassar N (2019) Prescription opioid dispensing in Australian children and adolescents: a national population-based study. Lancet Child Adolesc Health 3:881–888
4. Besag FM, Vasey MJ, Lao KS, Wong IC (2019) Adverse events associated with melatonin for the treatment of primary or secondary sleep disorders: a systematic review. CNS Drugs 33:1167–1186
5. Blaker H (2000) Confidence curves and improved exact confidence intervals for discrete distributions. Can J Stat 28:783–798
Cited by
5 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献