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Journal Article

Citation

Smyth BP, James P, Cullen W, Darker C. Int. J. Drug Policy 2015; 26(9): 887-889.

Affiliation

Department of Public Health & Primary Care, Trinity College Dublin, Ireland.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2015, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.drugpo.2015.05.021

PMID

26139009

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Legislative changes targeting novel psychoactive substance (NPS) use were introduced in Ireland over the summer of 2010 and resulted in closure of 90% of headshops. We sought to examine use of NPS among adolescents attending addiction treatment both before and after this legislation.

METHODS: We included all adolescents entering assessment at one outpatient service comparing the 6 months immediately prior to the legislation in May 2010 to the same 6-month period the following year. Clinicians identified problematic use of between one and four substances for each patient. Secondly, information was recorded on recent (past 3 months) use of NPS.

RESULTS: There were 94 treatment episodes included, with mean age of 16.8 years. Problematic use of any NPS fell from 14 patients (34%) in the pre-legislation period to zero (p<0.001). There was also a significant decline in recent use of any NPS (82% vs 28%, p<0.001). Recent use of cocaine and amphetamines also declined, but problematic use of these drugs was unchanged.

CONCLUSION: Use of NPS among adolescents attending drug and alcohol treatment was substantially reduced 6-12 months after the introduction of legislation prohibiting sale of NPS and resultant closure of most headshops.


Language: en

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