Deaths of heroin users in a general practice population.
- 1 March 1986
- journal article
- Vol. 36 (284) , 120-2
Abstract
Recent evidence suggests that heroin users in the UK are 16 times more likely to die than otherwise expected, although causes of death are varied. The present investigation examines deaths of heroin users at a large Scottish general practice over a four-year period prior to 1 July 1985. A mortality rate of 9.72 per 1000 heroin-user patients per year was observed, roughly half that previously reported, although this difference did not prove to be statistically significant. A higher proportion of the observed deaths were attributed to heroin, and fewer to the misuse of other drugs, and it is speculated that this may reflect the practice's policy of not prescribing opiates to heroin users. Factors associated with heroin-user deaths are examined and areas identified where general practitioners may help to avert some of these deaths.This publication has 12 references indexed in Scilit:
- HTLV-III ANTIBODY IN EDINBURGH DRUG ADDICTSThe Lancet, 1985
- Heroin users: notifications to the Home Office Addict's Index by general practitioners.BMJ, 1985
- British Opiate Addicts: An 11-Year Follow-upThe British Journal of Psychiatry, 1985
- Deaths of drug addicts in the United Kingdom 1967-81.BMJ, 1985
- Drug users in contact with general practice.BMJ, 1985
- Heroin-Related Deaths: New Epidemiologic InsightsScience, 1984
- Addict death rates during a four-year posttreatment follow-up.American Journal of Public Health, 1982
- Heroin "Overdose" Death: Contribution of Drug-Associated Environmental CuesScience, 1982
- Editorial: Heroin deaths--mystery or overdose?Published by American Medical Association (AMA) ,1974
- Morbidity and mortality from heroin dependence. 1. Survey of heroin addicts known to home office.BMJ, 1968