The health needs of people leaving prison with a history of methamphetamine and/or opioid use

Author:

Cumming Craig1ORCID,Kinner Stuart A.2345ORCID,McKetin Rebecca6ORCID,Li Ian7,Preen David B.1

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Health Services Research, School of Population and Global Health University of Western Australia Perth Australia

2. Centre for Adolescent Health Murdoch Children's Research Institute Melbourne Australia

3. Melbourne School of Population and Global Health The University of Melbourne Melbourne Australia

4. Griffith Criminology Institute Griffith University Brisbane Australia

5. School of Population Health Curtin University Perth Australia

6. National Drug and Alcohol Research Centre UNSW Sydney Sydney Australia

7. School of Population and Global Health University of Western Australia Perth Australia

Abstract

AbstractIntroductionMethamphetamine use is more common than opioid use among prison entrants in some countries, including Australia, yet most research and policy focuses on opioid use. This suggests that traditional opioid‐focused interventions are no longer appropriate for the majority of this group in countries such as Australia. To inform policy and practice, we compared socio‐demographic characteristics and health needs of people leaving prison with a history of methamphetamine use and/or opioid use.MethodsA cross‐sectional survey of incarcerated adults administered the World Health Organization Alcohol, Smoking and Substance Involvement Screening Test was used to identify moderate‐/high‐risk methamphetamine use (n = 909), opioid use (n = 115) or combined methamphetamine/opioid use (n = 356) before incarceration. We compared groups using modified log‐linked Poisson regression with robust error variance.ResultsCompared to the opioid‐only group, the methamphetamine‐only group were: significantly more often aged <25 years; significantly more likely to identify as Indigenous; significantly less likely to have a history of prior incarceration, drug injection or overdose. A significantly lower proportion of methamphetamine‐only and methamphetamine‐and‐opioid participants self‐reported current hepatitis C infection compared to opioid‐only participants. A majority of participants in all groups screened positive for current psychological distress according to the K10.Discussion and ConclusionsPeople leaving prison with a history of methamphetamine use differ from opioid users with respect to demographics, patterns of substance use and related health concerns. Treatment and harm reduction efforts for people who experience incarceration must respond to patterns of drug use in this population, and invest at scale in coordinated, continuous services for co‐occurring substance use and mental health problems.

Funder

National Health and Medical Research Council

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Health (social science),Medicine (miscellaneous)

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