2021
DOI: 10.1016/s2468-2667(21)00007-4
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Periods of altered risk for non-fatal drug overdose: a self-controlled case series

Abstract: Background Being recently released from prison or discharged from hospital, or being dispensed opioids, benzodiazepines, or antipsychotics have been associated with an increased risk of fatal drug overdose. This study aimed to examine the association between these periods and non-fatal drug overdose using a within-person design.Methods In this self-controlled case series, we used data from the provincial health insurance client roster to identify a 20% random sample of residents (aged ≥10 years) in British Col… Show more

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Cited by 38 publications
(48 citation statements)
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“…Negative binomial regression models allowed to study repeated overdoses without censoring the observation period on the occurrence of the first event as applied previously. 21 , 26 This expands our understanding pertaining to overdoses, since censoring restricts the denominator when calculating rate ratios, possibly leading to under-estimation of overdose risk. Although we accounted to some extent for residual confounding, differences pertaining to treatment modality and overdose risk might not be exclusively attributable to treatment modality but instead, mediated by treatment retention, illicit drug use, or affected by patients’ varying degrees of dependence.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 95%
See 2 more Smart Citations
“…Negative binomial regression models allowed to study repeated overdoses without censoring the observation period on the occurrence of the first event as applied previously. 21 , 26 This expands our understanding pertaining to overdoses, since censoring restricts the denominator when calculating rate ratios, possibly leading to under-estimation of overdose risk. Although we accounted to some extent for residual confounding, differences pertaining to treatment modality and overdose risk might not be exclusively attributable to treatment modality but instead, mediated by treatment retention, illicit drug use, or affected by patients’ varying degrees of dependence.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 95%
“…A recently conducted self-controlled case-series study by Keen et al 21 examined non-fatal overdoses among patients who received OAT and, revealing that patients who were exposed to OAT had a lower non-fatal overdose risk compared to unexposed patients. That study highlighted the time-dependent risk of non-fatal overdose for people who received OAT with 1.24 decrease in non-fatal overdose incidence risk from weeks 1-2 to weeks 3-4 during treatment initiation, a stabilisation for the remaining period in treatment and a possible increase for the weeks 1-4 after treatment cessation.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…This analysis used data collected by the BC Coroners Service as part of their ongoing surveillance of illicit drug toxicity deaths. Future studies may consider linking data to investigate other factors that are known to influence overdose risk such as discontinuation from opioid agonist treatment or release from prison [15]. These data could help to identify factors associated with increased vulnerability to overdose death during COVID‐19 that are not fully captured in this analysis.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…First, we divided the exposures into early versus later service initiation, using separate indicator variables if the first contact occurred early (<30 days after release) versus later (≥30 days after release). This one-month period is widely regarded as a critical time window during which people released from prison are especially vulnerable to substance-related harm [ 34 ], and there is evidence that contact with health services during the first month post-release is important to ensuring ongoing engagement with care [ 35 ]. Second, we divided the exposures into single service use versus repeat service use, with separate indicator variables representing the period between first and second service contact (if any), and the period following the second contact.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%