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All articles in this issue:
Drug, alcohol and tobacco policy after Cabinet reshuffle
National policy framework for children and young people
Addiction recovery: a contagious paradigm
Recovery in national drugs strategies
Legislation on new psychoactive substances
Illegal drugs activity to be included in national accounts
Towards UNGASS 2016
Polydrug use in Ireland: 2010/11 survey results
Suicide and self-harm among Irish adolescents
Self-cutting and intentional overdose
Young people’s access to drugs
Gambling in Europe and Ireland: the evidence
SPHE and substance use education
Promoting participation by seldom heard young people
Youth mental health and substance misuse disorders in deprived urban areas
Supporting children in families experiencing mental health difficulties
Therapeutic communities in Europe
Pharmacist–patient structured methadone detoxification in Mountjoy Prison
New publications
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Polydrug use in Ireland: 2010/11 survey results
by Margaret Curtin

In June 2014 the National Advisory Committee on Drugs and Alcohol published Bulletin 5 in a series of reports on the 2010/11 survey on drug use in the general population.1 The bulletin focused on polydrug use in the adult population (15–64 years). Polydrug use was defined as concurrent substance use, where a person uses at least two substances within a one-month period.  The final achieved sample was 5,134 in the Republic of Ireland. This represented a response rate of 60%.

 

Twenty per cent of all adults had not used any substance within the last month.  Women were more likely than men not to have used any substance (23% vs 19%).  The most common combination of substances used was alcohol and tobacco (16%), followed by alcohol and other legal drugs (7%), alcohol, tobacco and other legal drugs (2%), and alcohol, tobacco and any illegal drug (2%).  Last month prevalence rates for alcohol, tobacco plus any illegal drug were higher among men (3%) than women (0.4%), and higher among young adults aged 15 to 34 (3%) than among older adults aged 35 to 64(1%).  However, older adults were more likely than younger adults to have used a combination of alcohol and anti-depressants.  The last-month prevalence of polydrug use including any illegal substance was 3%.

Patterns of association between use of one substance and a range of other substances are outlined in Table 1.  Association between use of alcohol and tobacco was high. Users of cannabis, amphetamine-type stimulants and cocaine were highly likely to have used other legal and illegal substances.  Of those who used cannabis within the last month, 85% used alcohol and 77% tobacco.  Of those who used cocaine within the last month, all reported having used alcohol, 77% smoked tobacco, 41% used cannabis, 14% used amphetamine-type stimulants and 12% used anti-depressants. 


Since 2006/7 there has been a statistically significant reduction in the prevalence of tobacco and amphetamine-type stimulant use among cannabis users.  There has also been a statistically significant reduction in the use of sedatives or tranquillisers among anti-depressant users.  But there has been a statistically significant increase in the prevalence of anti-depressant use among alcohol users and amphetamine-type stimulant users.

(Margaret Curtin)

 

1 National Advisory Committee on Drugs and Alcohol (2014) Drug use in Ireland and Northern Ireland 2010/11 drug prevalence survey: polydrug use results. Bulletin 5. Dublin: National Advisory Committee on Drugs and Alcohol. www.drugsandalcohol.ie/22171



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