Abstract
BackgroundThe impact of the prescription opioid public health crisis has been illustrated by the dramatic increase in opioid-related deaths in North America. We aimed to identify patterns and characteristics amongst opioid-users whose cause of death was related to opioid toxicity.MethodsThis was a population-based study of Ontarians between the years 2006 and 2008. All drug-related deaths which occurred during this time frame were reviewed at the Office of the Chief Coroner of Ontario, and opioid-related deaths were identified. Medical, toxicology, pathology, and police reports were comprehensively reviewed. Narratives, semi-quantitative, and quantitative variables were extracted, tabulated, and analyzed.ResultsOut of 2330 drug-related deaths in Ontario, 58% were attributed either in whole or in part, to opioids (n = 1359). Oxycodone was involved in approximately one-third of all opioid-related deaths. At least 7% of the entire cohort used opioids that were prescribed for friends and/or family, 19% inappropriately self-administered opioids (injection, inhalation, chewed patch), 3% were recently released from jail, and 5% had been switched from one opioid to another near the time of death. Accidental deaths were significantly associated with personal history of substance abuse, enrollment in methadone maintenance programs, cirrhosis, hepatitis, and cocaine use. Suicides were significantly associated with mental illness, previous suicide attempts, chronic pain, and a history of cancer.Significance/ConclusionThese results identify novel, susceptible groups of opioid-users whose cause of death was related to opioids in Ontario and provide the first evidence to assist in quantifying the contribution of opioid misuse and diversion amongst opioid-related mortality in Canada. Multifaceted prevention strategies need to be developed based on subpopulations of opioid users.
Highlights
Non-medical use of prescription opioids has culminated in a public health crisis in many North American jurisdictions
The impact of this crisis has been powerfully illustrated by the dramatic increase in opioid-related deaths [1,2,3,4,5,6]: in 2008, prescription opioids were involved in 14,800 accidental deaths in the United States [4]
Opioid-related deaths appear to be concentrated amongst patients treated by physicians who prescribed opioids more frequently [8], and high doses are significantly associated with an increase risk of mortality [9]
Summary
Non-medical use of prescription opioids has culminated in a public health crisis in many North American jurisdictions. Opioid-related deaths appear to be concentrated amongst patients treated by physicians who prescribed opioids more frequently [8], and high doses are significantly associated with an increase risk of mortality [9]. Such discoveries have subsequently shaped new provincial strategies to help curb and prevent this epidemic [10,11,12]. We aimed to identify patterns and characteristics amongst opioid-users whose cause of death was related to opioid toxicity
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