Objective
Substance use rates have increased in adults 50 years and older, and substance use in this population is associated with significant consequences. Given that little is known about their underlying substance use patterns, the objective was to identify latent classes of adults 50 years and older by pastâyear substance use, pastâmonth substance use, and pastâyear substance use disorder (SUD) diagnosis.
Methods
The National Survey on Drug Use and Health is an annual nationwide crossâsectional U.S. survey. Participants were 35,229 civilian, nonâinstitutionalized U.S. residents, 50 years and older. Pastâyear and pastâmonth alcohol, tobacco, marijuana, heroin, cocaine, methamphetamine use, and opioid, stimulant, and tranquilizer/sedative prescription drug misuse (PDM) were captured, as was pastâyear DSMâIV SUD from these substances. Correlates included mental health, physical health, and healthcare utilization variables.
Results
Latent class analysis indicated four pastâyear or pastâmonth substance use subgroups (AlcoholâOnly, AlcoholâTobaccoâMarijuana, CocaineâPolydrug, PDMâPolydrug), with SUD prevalence rising from 3.2% to 17.3%, 68.8%, and 78.5% by pastâyear subgroup; similarly, rates of pastâyear suicidal ideation increased from 2.1%, to 4.8%, 12.0%, and 20.4% by pastâyear subgroup. For SUD, there were three subgroups (Low Nicotine Dependence [ND], High Alcohol Use Disorder, Multiple SUDs). Over 90% of adults were in a lowârisk subgroup (i.e., AlcoholâOnly and Low ND), but members of CocaineâPolydrug, PDMâPolydrug, or Multiple SUDs latent classes had high rates of mental and physical health concerns.
Conclusions
Most adults 50 and older have lower risk profiles, but those engaged in PDM or cocaine use are heavily substanceâinvolved and need screening and likely multiâdisciplinary intervention.