Abstract

ObjectivesOver The Counter (OTC) medication abuse is an increasing yet under-researched public health concern, particularly in the UK and Ireland. Our study provides a descriptive analysis of the clinical profiles; treatment and prevalence of patients admitted with OTC opiate abuse.MethodUsing a specially designed demographic form, the records of patients admitted to St. Patrick's Hospital, a 280 bed inpatient mental health and addiction treatment facility in Dublin, Ireland with a diagnosis of harmful OTC opiate abuse or opiate dependency as defined in ICD-10 were reviewed retrospectively. All patients diagnosed with OTC opiate abuse (ICD F11.1) or dependency (ICD F11.2) on admission to our centre were included in the study. Patients with a diagnosis of primary illicit opiate misuse were excluded. Diagnoses were established by a consultant psychiatrist.ResultsApproximately 1% (n=20) of inpatients admitted in a year were diagnosed with OTC opiate abuse. The average daily codeine intake was 261.10 mg per person. Seventy five percent (n=15) of the inpatients experienced OTC opiate withdrawal and were treated with protocol driven withdrawal regimes for an average of 16.10 days. The female: male ratio was nearly 2:1 with an average age of 49.2 years. Patients tended to have comorbid psychiatric (n=19, 95%), physical (n=17, 85%) and polysubstance (n=13, 65%) illness. The relapse rate of re-admissions within six months of discharge was 35%.ConclusionsOTC opiate abuse is a covert illness since abusers often have significant comorbid psychiatric, medical and polysubstance illness making its assessment, diagnosis and subsequent treatment challenging.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call