Abstract

AimsTo estimate the prevalence of using Electronic Nicotine Delivery Systems (ENDS) for the consumption of illicit Substances (illegal under UK Law). We hypothesised that this is an increasingly common mode of delivery.BackgroundUsing ENDS to consume nicotine is increasing in popularity worldwide with a prevalence in the UK of 6% and in the USA 4%-6%. Existing studies have reported that people are switching to vaping because it is felt to be safer than smoking.However there is also emerging evidence that this mode of consumption is increasingly being used as it is discreet and much less easy to detect, hence sometimes referred to as stealth-vaping. This appears to be driving a switch to vaping to administer substances other than nicotine, notably, but not exclusively cannabis, including concentrated forms of Tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) and synthetic cannabinoids. Anecdotally this practice is known to be occurring in psychiatric inpatient settings.This is against a backdrop of the uncertain long-term effects of vaping and the emergence of case reports of the death of otherwise healthy young persons after using ENDS to consume cannabis.MethodSearch strategy: MEDLINE , EMBASE, Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, Grey Literature using Medical Subject Headings (MeSH), text words relating to vaping of drugs and hand searching journals.Statistical methods: Synthesis of data was performed using inverse variance with double arcsine transformation in MetaXL. Heterogeneity was assessed with the Cochran's Q and I2.ResultFrom 970 abstracts, 61 papers were selected for full text review, 18 met the inclusion criteria. The total study population for the outcome of ENDS nicotine users who also use ENDS for the consumption of illicit substances was 9098. There was significant heterogeneity with a random effects model prevalence of 17% (95%CI 7%-32%). The total study population for the outcome of cannabis users who use ENDS to consume cannabis was 52708. There was significant heterogeneity with a random effects model prevalence of 23% (95%CI 12%-37%).ConclusionThe use of ENDS to consume illicit substances is concerning as it appears to be relatively common practice. This was most notable in studies of existing cannabis users, younger people and medical marijuana users.Given the uncertainty of long term health consequences and poor understanding of sudden death in some users, this study highlights an emerging and substantial public health concern.Currently there is a paucity of primary studies to elucidate the impact on health.

Highlights

  • People with mental health problems, especially those treated with psychiatric medication experience greater rates of sexual difficulties than those in the general population

  • Almost all stated that mental health patients have capacity to make appropriate decisions about their sexual behaviour patterns. 43% thought people with mental health problems don’t have similar patterns of sexual behaviour compared to people without mental health problems. 11% stated that people with mental health problems do not experience greater rates of sexual difficulties than those in the general population

  • 70% stated taking a sexual history should be an integral part of psychiatric assessment. 44% reported lack of knowledge and skills when talking about sexual health and 33% avoided asking about sexual health due to lack of knowledge

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Summary

Introduction

Unexpectedly we did not find IFNα stimulation to associate with brain inflammatory transcriptional changes. This work demonstrates a brain inflammatory response to peripheral IFNγ stimulation. - Mental health professionals’ understanding of sexual health issues among their patients Nalin Hettiarachchi1*, Praveen Kumar[2] and vikramraj balasundaram2 1Russells Hall Hospital and 2Bushey Fields Hospital *Corresponding author.

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