Monday, August 8, 2011

Self-medication of anxiety tied to later drug abuse

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - People who drink or use drugs to calm down anxious nerves are at increased risk of developing full-blown substance abuse disorder down the road, Canadian researchers have found.

Their study is the first to try to shed light on a long-standing chicken-or-egg question: Do anxiety-ridden people self-medicate because they are substance abusers or do they become substance abusers because they self-medicate?

Tapping into a national U.S. survey of drinking problems and mental illness, the researchers were able to follow close to 35,000 people over three years.

Of those who had anxiety disorder at the outset of the study and said they self-medicated with alcohol, 13 percent developed alcoholism, Jennifer Robinson and her colleagues at the University of Manitoba in Winnipeg report in the Archives of General Psychiatry.

Among respondents who didn't self-medicate, only about five percent got hooked on the bottle. The pattern held up for people who used drugs to calm their nerves.

After taking income, age and other factors into consideration, self-medicating people had 2.5 to 5 times the odds of becoming dependent on alcohol or drugs compared to people who stuck with their doctor's prescription.

In theory, a person who self-medicates could be a budding drug abuser without the interviewer having spotted it, so the findings aren't bulletproof evidence that self-medication is a slippery slope.

Still, the researchers say their study bolsters that hypothesis.

They also found that people who self-medicated with alcohol were three times as likely to develop social phobia as those who didn't.

It's possible those people had some degree of phobia from the get-go, according to the researchers, and that drug use then fueled that.

"Another possibility is that the social unacceptability of substance use may create a desire to avoid social contact in those who actively use other drugs," they write.

SOURCE: http://bit.ly/oRI26O Archives of General Psychiatry, August, 2011.

1 comment:

  1. In 2009, 16 million Americans 12 years of age and older had taken a prescription pain reliever, tranquilizer, stimulant, or sedative for nonmedical purposes at least once in the year prior to being surveyed, according to the National Survey on Drug Use and Health (Substance Abuse and Mental Health Administration). Although any type of medication has the potential to be abused, certain groups of prescription drugs are most commonly abused.

    Although any type of medication has the potential to be abused, certain groups of prescription drugs are most commonly abused.

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