Problem drug use – conceptual and methodical
considerations
Rehm, J.1,2,3,41Technische Universität Dresden
2 Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, Toronto, Canada3 WHO Collaboration Centre at the Research Centre for Public
Health and Addiction, Zurich, Switzerland4Dala Lana School of Public Health, University of Toronto
A bird’s eye view
General observation on global monitoring of alcohol and global monitoring of drugs
• Worlds apart!
• Different concepts
• Different agencies
• Different indicators
Monitoring of illicit drugs
In 1998, the General Assembly gave the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) a monitoring mandate:
• to assembly and to publish "comprehensive and balanced information about the world drug problem”
in recognition of the importance of factual and objective information in international drug control as a basis for policy and other interventions
What is monitored and what not?
• Production (opioids, coca/crack/cocaine, cannabis, amphetamines and stimulants, other drugs)
• Seizures (in the same categories)• Prices (again for the same categories, wholesale and
street-level prices as well as purity levels)• Consumption (estimated annual prevalence and
treatment demand)
Drug attributable harm is NOT monitored.
Global monitoring of alcohol
• Global Information System on Alcohol and Health (GISAH) as first step
• But not as clearly defined and developed as illicit drug monitoring
• But: Word Health Assembly has called for a strengthening of “the Secretariat’s capacity to provide support to Member States in monitoring alcohol-related harm and to reinforce the scientific and empirical evidence of effectiveness of policies.” (WHA, 2005). [1] (contrast to monitoring of illicit drugs, where only supply and use are to be monitored)
• 2008 WHA part of global strategy
Main differences
• Monitoring of use indicators vs. monitoring of consequences indicators
• Global monitoring of alcohol with a clear mandate to have one summary indicator per country to judge: increase, decrease, stable trend of alcohol related harm. The country indicators are not necessarily the same
EMCDDA concept of PDU
Problem opioid users
Problem cocaine users
Problem amphetamine users
Injecting drug users
EMCDDA: Methods and definitions: problematic drug use population
‘Problem drug use’ is defined by the EMCDDA as ‘injecting drug use or long duration/regular use of opioids, cocaine and/or amphetamines’. This definition specifically includes regular or long-term use of prescribed opioids such as methadone, but does not include their rare or irregular use, nor the use of ecstasy or cannabis. Existing estimates of problem drug use are often limited to opioid and polydrug use. As a reaction to a growing stimulants problem, as well as a growing number of cannabis-related treatment demands, the EMCDDA is currently examining the possibilities of breakdowns by main drug, as well as the best way of estimating the population of intensive and/or long-term, possibly dependent or problematic, users of cannabis.
“Problem, intensive and polydrug use” discussed
Problem opioid users Problem cocaine
users
Problem amphetamine users
Heavy/long-term cannabis users
e.g. Intensive, long-term or otherwise harmful cocaine users (ILH)
And, and, and…
Injecting drug users
How to measure PDU?
• a simple multiplier method using police, treatment, mortality or HIV/HCV data;
• capture–recapture methods;
• extrapolation via multivariate indicator methods
Indirectly, PDU is measured via harm or costs.
Example Cannabis: Mortality attributable to alcohol, illegal drugs and tobacco by age and sex, Canada 2002
Alcohol Illegal Drugs* Cannabis Tobacco§Passive smoking
Males
0 - 14 50 24 1 58 --15 - 29 682 238 9 40 130 - 44 842 379 6 522 945 - 59 1,045 408 5 3,708 9160+ 875 134 5 19,438 407Total Males 3,494 1,183 26 23,766 507
Male as % of all cause total 3.08% 1.04% 0.02% 20.98% 0.45%
Females
0 - 14 26 10 1 33 --15 - 29 124 95 3 29 030 - 44 218 163 2 293 345 - 59 386 153 2 1,782 3660+ 9 92 4 11,305 284Total Females 764 512 13 13,443 324
Female as % of all cause total 0.69% 0.46% 0.01% 12.18% 0.29%
Total 4,258 1,695 39 37,209 831
Total as % of all cause 1.90% 0.76% 0.02% 16.64% 0.37%
Substance-attributable death total as percent of ages before age 70
Alcohol Illegal Drugs* Cannabis Tobacco§Passive smoking
Male < 70 yr. 3,160 1,135 23 9,699 226Male as % of all cause total < 70 yr. 7.67% 2.75% 0.06% 23.53% 0.55%Female < 70 yr. 955 464 10 4,550 89
Female as % of all cause total < 70 yr. 3.72% 1.81% 0.04% 17.74% 0.35%Total <70 yr. 4,115 1,599 33 14,249 315
Total as % of all cause total < 70 yr. 6.15% 2.39% 0.05% 21.31% 0.47%*Including cannabis (traffic accidents only)§Including active and passive smoking
Hospitalizations or policy activity as indirect indicator for PDU
• Different picture with hospitalizations: 16% of all acute care hospitalizations in Canada for illegal drugs are due to cannabis only, 12% of all psychiatric hospitalizations for illegal drugs, and a higher proportion in specialized treatment centres.
• If we take police activity, the majority of police activity in the area of illegal drugs in Canada 2002 is for cannabis.
• Different harm as basis, different conclusion!
INCB Report 2007
• “Abuse of prescription drugs to surpass illicit drug abuse, says INCB”
[INCB Press Release, 01 March 2007]
14
The rise of prescription opioids in
North America
• In Canadian studies, in most cities prescription opioids have replaced heroin as main opioid (e.g. OPICAN).
• Canadian coroners’ autopsies: more than 25% of overdose deaths involve prescription opioids
Annual Number of New Abusers of Psychotherapeutics in the US: 1965-2002; NSDUH, cf. Compton & Volkow, 2006
Increasing deaths from opioid analgesics in the United StatesLeonard J. Paulozzi MD, MPH1*, Daniel S. Budnitz MD, MPH2 and Yongli Xi MS3
1Division of Unintentional Injury Prevention, National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Centers for DiseaseControl and Prevention, Atlanta, GA, USA2Division of Healthcare Quality Promotion, National Center for Infectious Diseases, Centers for Disease Control andPrevention, Atlanta, GA, USA3Office of Statistics and Programming, National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Centers for Disease Control andPrevention, Atlanta, GA, USA
SUMMARYPurpose Since 1990, numerous jurisdictions in the United States (US) have reported increases in drug poisoning mortality.During the same time period, the use of opioid analgesics has increased markedly as part of more aggressive painmanagement. This study documented a dramatic increase in poisoning mortality rates and compared it to sales of opioidanalgesics nationwide.Methods Trend analysis of drug poisoning deaths using underlying cause of death and multiple cause of death mortalitydata from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and opioid analgesic sales data from the US Drug EnforcementAdministration.Results Unintentional drug poisoning mortality rates increased on average 5.3% per year from 1979 to 1990 and 18.1% peryear from 1990 to 2002. The rapid increase during the 1990s reflects the rising number of deaths attributed to narcotics andunspecified drugs. Between 1999 and 2002, the number of opioid analgesic poisonings on death certificates increased 91.2%,while heroin and cocaine poisonings increased 12.4% and 22.8%, respectively. By 2002, opioid analgesic poisoning was listed in 5528 deaths—more than either heroin or cocaine. The increase in deaths generally matched the increase in sales for each type of opioid. The increase in deaths involving methadone tracked the increase in methadone used as an analgesic rather than methadone used in narcotics treatment programs.Conclusions A national epidemic of drug poisoning deaths began in the 1990s. Prescriptions for opioid analgesics alsoincreased in this time frame and may have inadvertently contributed to the increases in drug poisoning deaths. Copyright#2006 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.key words—poisoning; mortality; opioid; analgesic; narcotic; methadone; oxycodone; fentanyl
What does it all mean for PDU?
• How do other areas handle it?• Again, there is a need for one summary indicator
which will be become relevant for policy (e.g., DALY for measuring health state of a nation, or life expectancy for measuring mortality of a nation, or GDP for measuring economic output)
• Even though the illegal drug area is not that important in the overall scheme of things, there is a plethora of indicators, with the consequence of an arbitrariness of judgement about the characterizing trend for a nation
Basic considerations: national summary indicator for alcohol
within global monitoringThe indicator has two constituents:
Levels of alcohol exposure (indirect indicator of alcohol-attributable harm)
Alcohol-related health burden
Both alcohol consumption and alcohol-related health burden can only be measured with considerable measurement error (Gmel & Rehm, 2004; Lopez et al., 2006). Given this situation, an “or” operator between the two constituents of the indicator is preferable.
Basic considerations for a summary indicator of PDU
• Conceptually and methodologically PDU is linked to harm and measured indirectly by harm category
• There should be a distinction between mortality and morbidity/social harm indicators, which may be later partly combined into DALYs or the like (main decision: “and” or “or” link; DALY = YLD + YLL; but harmful use of alcohol = use-derived indicator or health consequences)
Important distinctions
• Mortality vs. morbidity/social harm based estimates
• Substance classes including polydrug users
• Source: prescription opioids vs. illicit opioids (may be related to different harm)
• Injection vs. non injection
Main challenges
• How do we bring all together into one comparable indicator?
• How do we compare backwards with the PDU tradition?
Tentative solution with two indicators combined by “or”• Introduce mortality as one key indicator from the
harm side, and differentiate between overlapping substance class where possible
• Develop PDU further by more systematically including treatment based estimates (i.e., bringing in cannabis, polydrug), and differentiate by overlapping substance class where possible
• Result: differentiated description (profile), but still one indicator for political discussion and policy (i.e., trend increased/decreased/stable)
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