Adolescents, Young Adults Face Greater Risk Of Opioid Use If Their Parents Had Multiple Opioid Prescriptions, Study Finds

MedPage Today (10/23, Firth) reports a study found that “adolescents and young adults were at greater risk of using opioids if their parents had multiple opioid prescriptions.” Researchers observed that “for more than 21,000 adolescents and young adults participating in a population health survey, those who had mothers who received two or more opioid prescriptions had an adjusted hazard ratio of 1.34 for any opioid prescription over 7-year follow-up, while those who had fathers with two or more opioid prescriptions had an adjusted hazard ratio of 1.19.” Furthermore, they found that “those with a mother or father who received two or more opioid prescriptions had more than double the risk of persistent opioid use compared with those whose parents did not receive any opioid prescriptions.” The study was published in PLOS Medicine.

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Posted in In The News.