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The mental health consequences of nonmedical prescription drug use among adolescents.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Published

Standard

The mental health consequences of nonmedical prescription drug use among adolescents. / Ali, M.M.; Dean, D.; Dowd, Bill et al.
In: The journal of mental health policy and economics, Vol. 18, No. 1, 01.03.2015, p. 3-15.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Ali, MM, Dean, D, Dowd, B, Lipari, R, Aldridge, AP & Novak, SP 2015, 'The mental health consequences of nonmedical prescription drug use among adolescents.', The journal of mental health policy and economics, vol. 18, no. 1, pp. 3-15.

APA

Ali, M. M., Dean, D., Dowd, B., Lipari, R., Aldridge, A. P., & Novak, S. P. (2015). The mental health consequences of nonmedical prescription drug use among adolescents. The journal of mental health policy and economics, 18(1), 3-15.

Vancouver

Ali MM, Dean D, Dowd B, Lipari R, Aldridge AP, Novak SP. The mental health consequences of nonmedical prescription drug use among adolescents. The journal of mental health policy and economics. 2015 Mar 1;18(1):3-15.

Author

Ali, M.M. ; Dean, D. ; Dowd, Bill et al. / The mental health consequences of nonmedical prescription drug use among adolescents. In: The journal of mental health policy and economics. 2015 ; Vol. 18, No. 1. pp. 3-15.

Bibtex

@article{67a61fb22db841fe973056bb63f2894e,
title = "The mental health consequences of nonmedical prescription drug use among adolescents.",
abstract = "BACKGROUND: Nonmedical prescription drug use is estimated to be the second most abused category of drugs after marijuana among adolescents. Prescription drugs can be highly addictive and prolonged use can produce neurological changes and physiological dependence and could result in adverse mental health outcomes. This topic is largely unexplored, as current knowledge of possible mechanisms of the linkage between adverse mental health consequences and prescription drug misuse is limited. AIM OF THE STUDY: This study explores the relationship between nonmedical use of prescription drugs and depression outcomes among adolescents. Given their complex and confounded relationship, our purpose is to better understand the extent to which nonmedical use of prescription drugs is an antecedent of depressive episodes. METHODS: Using data from the 2008-2012 National Survey on Drug Use and Health, the study employs a propensity score matching methodology to ascertain whether nonmedical use of prescription drugs is linked to major depressive episodes among adolescents. RESULTS: The results document a positive relationship between nonmedical prescription drug use and major depressive episodes among adolescents. Specifically, the results indicate that adolescents who used prescription drugs non-medically are 33% to 35% more likely to experience major depressive episodes compared to their non-abusing counterparts. IMPLICATIONS FOR HEALTH POLICY: This provides additional evidence about the potential public health consequences of misuse of prescription drugs on adverse mental health outcomes. Given the significant increased risk of major depressive episode among adolescents who use prescription drugs nonmedically, it seems that the prevention of nonmedical prescription drug use warrants the utilization of both educational and public health resources. IMPLICATIONS FOR FUTURE RESEARCH: An important area for future research is to understand how any policy initiatives in this area must strike a balance between the need to minimize the misuse of prescription drugs and the need to ensure access for their legitimate health care use.",
author = "M.M. Ali and D. Dean and Bill Dowd and R. Lipari and A.P. Aldridge and S.P. Novak",
year = "2015",
month = mar,
day = "1",
language = "English",
volume = "18",
pages = "3--15",
journal = "The journal of mental health policy and economics",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The mental health consequences of nonmedical prescription drug use among adolescents.

AU - Ali, M.M.

AU - Dean, D.

AU - Dowd, Bill

AU - Lipari, R.

AU - Aldridge, A.P.

AU - Novak, S.P.

PY - 2015/3/1

Y1 - 2015/3/1

N2 - BACKGROUND: Nonmedical prescription drug use is estimated to be the second most abused category of drugs after marijuana among adolescents. Prescription drugs can be highly addictive and prolonged use can produce neurological changes and physiological dependence and could result in adverse mental health outcomes. This topic is largely unexplored, as current knowledge of possible mechanisms of the linkage between adverse mental health consequences and prescription drug misuse is limited. AIM OF THE STUDY: This study explores the relationship between nonmedical use of prescription drugs and depression outcomes among adolescents. Given their complex and confounded relationship, our purpose is to better understand the extent to which nonmedical use of prescription drugs is an antecedent of depressive episodes. METHODS: Using data from the 2008-2012 National Survey on Drug Use and Health, the study employs a propensity score matching methodology to ascertain whether nonmedical use of prescription drugs is linked to major depressive episodes among adolescents. RESULTS: The results document a positive relationship between nonmedical prescription drug use and major depressive episodes among adolescents. Specifically, the results indicate that adolescents who used prescription drugs non-medically are 33% to 35% more likely to experience major depressive episodes compared to their non-abusing counterparts. IMPLICATIONS FOR HEALTH POLICY: This provides additional evidence about the potential public health consequences of misuse of prescription drugs on adverse mental health outcomes. Given the significant increased risk of major depressive episode among adolescents who use prescription drugs nonmedically, it seems that the prevention of nonmedical prescription drug use warrants the utilization of both educational and public health resources. IMPLICATIONS FOR FUTURE RESEARCH: An important area for future research is to understand how any policy initiatives in this area must strike a balance between the need to minimize the misuse of prescription drugs and the need to ensure access for their legitimate health care use.

AB - BACKGROUND: Nonmedical prescription drug use is estimated to be the second most abused category of drugs after marijuana among adolescents. Prescription drugs can be highly addictive and prolonged use can produce neurological changes and physiological dependence and could result in adverse mental health outcomes. This topic is largely unexplored, as current knowledge of possible mechanisms of the linkage between adverse mental health consequences and prescription drug misuse is limited. AIM OF THE STUDY: This study explores the relationship between nonmedical use of prescription drugs and depression outcomes among adolescents. Given their complex and confounded relationship, our purpose is to better understand the extent to which nonmedical use of prescription drugs is an antecedent of depressive episodes. METHODS: Using data from the 2008-2012 National Survey on Drug Use and Health, the study employs a propensity score matching methodology to ascertain whether nonmedical use of prescription drugs is linked to major depressive episodes among adolescents. RESULTS: The results document a positive relationship between nonmedical prescription drug use and major depressive episodes among adolescents. Specifically, the results indicate that adolescents who used prescription drugs non-medically are 33% to 35% more likely to experience major depressive episodes compared to their non-abusing counterparts. IMPLICATIONS FOR HEALTH POLICY: This provides additional evidence about the potential public health consequences of misuse of prescription drugs on adverse mental health outcomes. Given the significant increased risk of major depressive episode among adolescents who use prescription drugs nonmedically, it seems that the prevention of nonmedical prescription drug use warrants the utilization of both educational and public health resources. IMPLICATIONS FOR FUTURE RESEARCH: An important area for future research is to understand how any policy initiatives in this area must strike a balance between the need to minimize the misuse of prescription drugs and the need to ensure access for their legitimate health care use.

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 25862204

VL - 18

SP - 3

EP - 15

JO - The journal of mental health policy and economics

JF - The journal of mental health policy and economics

IS - 1

ER -