Recovery Harder for Addicts Who Start Young
A NIDA-funded study has demonstrated that the relapse rate for heroin
addicts increases with time and that the probability of long-run
abstinence depends on the age of first drug use. Those who start
daily heroin use at a younger age are more likely to relapse than
those who start later.
The study, conducted by Dr. Marnik G. Dekimpe
of the Catholic University Leuven in Belgium and his colleagues
in Belgium and at the University of California, Los Angeles, examined
the treatment histories of 846 patients at methadone clinics in
central and southern California. The researchers looked at males
and females, whites and Chicanos, most of whom started using heroin
between the ages of 17 and 25. Subjects were interviewed over a
4-year period during and after treatment to determine the probability
of their relapse to heroin use.
The finding that relapse is connected to time suggests the need
for long-term periodic monitoring of a former heroin user's abstinence,
Dr. Dekimpe says. The researchers also found drug relapse odds were
significantly different across the sociodemographic groups studied,
suggesting that prevention resources could be directed to groups
at higher risk. No significant differences in relapse probability
were associated with either gender or education.
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