1. Awareness of the potential consequences of alcohol consumption in the context of chronic pain and prescription opioid use.
- Author
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Lape, Emma C., Paladino, Michael B., Powers, Jessica M., LaRowe, Lisa R., and Ditre, Joseph W.
- Subjects
RISK perception ,MUSCULOSKELETAL pain ,CHRONIC pain ,ALCOHOL drinking ,OPIOID abuse - Abstract
Background: Alcohol and prescription opioid use are highly prevalent among chronic pain populations. One-fifth of individuals prescribed opioids report same-day use of alcohol and opioids. Alcohol use and alcohol/opioid co-use can have deleterious pain management and health outcomes. The extent to which individuals with chronic pain are aware of these deleterious outcomes is considerably understudied. Objectives: To explore individuals' understanding of seven health- and pain-related risks of alcohol/alcohol-opioid use. An exploratory aim was to examine whether greater risk awareness was associated with alcohol/opioid use patterns. Methods: Participants included 261 adults age ≥21(36.4% women) endorsing current alcohol use, chronic musculoskeletal pain, and opioid prescription who completed an online survey via Amazon Mechanical Turk. Results: Distribution of the total number of items for which a participant endorsed awareness was as follows: zero (10.7%), one (5.0%), two (13.0%), three (13.8%), four (13.8%), five (11.5%), six (10.0%), and seven items (22.2%). Awareness of the health consequences of alcohol/alcohol-opioid use was positively associated with opioid misuse behaviors (β =.525, ΔR
2 =.251, p <.001), and higher-risk alcohol consumption (β =.152, ΔR2 =.021, p =.011). Conclusion: Many adults with chronic pain are unaware of the health consequences of alcohol/alcohol-opioid use. Findings of positive covariation between risk awareness and higher-risk alcohol/opioid use suggest that future interventions among this population should go beyond simple risk education and utilize motivational enhancement to help change decisional balance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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