Heroin
use, addiction up sharply among U.S. whites: study
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[March 30, 2017] By
Patricia Reaney
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Heroin use in the
United States has risen five-fold in the past decade and dependence on
the drug has more than tripled, with the biggest jumps among whites and
men with low incomes and little education, researchers said on
Wednesday.
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Whites aged 18 to 44 accounted for the biggest rise in heroin
addiction, which has been fueled in part by the misuse of opioid
prescription drugs.
The findings are troubling because the people most affected have few
resources to deal with the problem, said Dr. Silvia Martins, an
associate professor of epidemiology at Columbia University Mailman
School of Public Health, and her colleagues.
"We are seeing that heroin use has increased in the past 10 years,"
Martins said in a phone interview. "It is more prominent among
whites with lower incomes and education and young adults."
Heroin use, which includes those who have tried the drug but not
become dependent on it, and addiction also rose more among unmarried
adults. Although a jump was seen among women, it as was not as
prominent as for men.
The researchers found no differences in heroin use or addiction
among the major regions of the country.
The findings, published online in the journal JAMA Psychiatry,
followed a statement from the American College of Physicians calling
for drug addiction and substance abuse disorders to be treated as a
chronic medical condition like diabetes or hypertension.
It also coincided with the expected appointment of New Jersey
Governor Chris Christie to head a federal commission to combat the
problem. Christie has declared opioid drug abuse a public health
crisis.
Martins agreed drug addiction should be treated as an illness.
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"By recognizing it is a disease, more people will become aware that
they need to seek help, or if they are frequent users, to know that
addiction is preventable," she said.
Martins and her colleagues uncovered the trend by analyzing two
studies, one from 2001-2002 and another from 2012-2013, and data
from 43,000 long-term heroin users.
In 2001-2002, there were similar rates of heroin use between whites
and non-whites, but by 2013 there was a significant race gap,
according to the study.
Martins called for expanding treatment programs, overdose prevention
and medication-assisted treatment, and for a change in doctors'
prescribing practices for opioids.
"I think some level of regulation is needed," she said. "At the same
time people who truly need that medication should get it but with
greater supervision."
(Reporting by Patricia Reaney; Editing by Patrick Enright and Paul
Simao)
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