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Oxycodone initiation in Australia (2014-2018): Sociodemographic factors and preceding health service use. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Oxycodone is the most prescribed strong opioid in Australia, with a study analyzing factors leading to its initiation among new users between 2014 and 2018 in New South Wales (NSW).
  • A significant portion of new oxycodone prescriptions (30%) were linked to health service interactions, such as hospital discharges and procedures, with a total of 830,963 new users identified, and only 4.6% continued using the drug after one year.
  • The research highlighted that older individuals and those living in rural areas were more likely to start using oxycodone, but social disadvantage did not significantly affect initiation rates.

Article Abstract

Aims: Oxycodone is the most commonly prescribed strong opioid in Australia. This study describes health service antecedents and sociodemographic factors associated with oxycodone initiation.

Methods: Population-based new user cohort study linking medicine dispensings, hospitalizations, emergency department visits, medical services and cancer notifications from New South Wales (NSW) for 2014-2018. New users had no dispensings of any opioid in the preceding year. We analysed health service use in the 5 days preceding initiation and proportion of people on treatment over 1 year and fitted an area-based, multivariable initiation model with sociodemographic covariates.

Results: Oxycodone accounted for 30% of opioid initiations. Annually, 3% of the NSW population initiated oxycodone, and 5-6% were prevalent users; the new user cohort comprised 830 963 people. Discharge from hospital (39.3%), therapeutic procedures (21.4%) and emergency department visits (19.7%) were common; a hospital admission for injury (6.0%) or a past-year history of cancer (7.2%) were less common. At 1 year after initiation, 4.6% of people were using oxycodone. In the multivariable model, new use of oxycodone increased with age and was higher for people outside major cities, for example, an incidence rate ratio of 1.43 (95% confidence interval 1.36-1.51) for inner regional areas relative to major cities; there was no evidence of variation in rates of new use by social disadvantage.

Conclusion: About half of new oxycodone use in NSW was preceded by a recent episode of hospital care or a therapeutic procedure. Higher rates of oxycodone initiation in rural and regional areas were not explained by sociodemographic factors.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/bcp.16063DOI Listing

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