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Intranasal Use of Prescription Stimulants Among Adults Aged 18 to 30: Results From A Crowdsourcing Platform

Authors :
Suzanne K. Vosburg
Stephen V. Faraone
Elizabeth Riley
Timothy Whitaker
Jessica Kardish
David Baker
Scott H. Kollins
Craig R. Rush
Source :
Journal of attention disorders. 27(1)
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Objective: Few studies of prescription stimulant non-oral, non-medical use (NMU) (defined by use not as prescribed) have been conducted in adults beyond the college population. The purpose of this study was to characterize prescription stimulant non-oral use, specifically intranasal (IN) use (snorting) in young adults. Method: Amazon’s MTurk platform was used to recruit participants for an online survey. Data were collected from March to April 2020. Results: Thirty-two percent ( n = 157) of survey respondents ( N = 975), aged 18 to 30, reported IN prescription stimulant use (average of 32.1 episodes of lifetime IN use). Adderall was the most-reported prescription stimulant used intranasally (89.2%). Most IN users (82%; n = 68) reported spending no more than 5 minutes tampering with prescription stimulants. Intranasal users said they would take the medication orally if unable to tamper or manipulate medication for IN use. Conclusion: These data help quantify a complex public health issue of ongoing IN use of prescription stimulants and suggest a potential role for manipulation-deterrent medications.

Details

ISSN :
15571246
Volume :
27
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of attention disorders
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....3d25379ed25192423795c86201bd04e6