Non-medical use of pharmaceuticals: trends, harms and treatment 2006–07 to 2015–16
Citation
AIHW
Australian Institute of Health and Welfare (2017) Non-medical use of pharmaceuticals: trends, harms and treatment 2006–07 to 2015–16, AIHW, Australian Government, accessed 05 October 2023.
APA
Australian Institute of Health and Welfare. (2017). Non-medical use of pharmaceuticals: trends, harms and treatment 2006–07 to 2015–16. Canberra: AIHW.
MLA
Australian Institute of Health and Welfare. Non-medical use of pharmaceuticals: trends, harms and treatment 2006–07 to 2015–16. AIHW, 2017.
Vancouver
Australian Institute of Health and Welfare. Non-medical use of pharmaceuticals: trends, harms and treatment 2006–07 to 2015–16. Canberra: AIHW; 2017.
Harvard
Australian Institute of Health and Welfare 2017, Non-medical use of pharmaceuticals: trends, harms and treatment 2006–07 to 2015–16, AIHW, Canberra.
PDF | 3.9Mb
The non-medical use of pharmaceuticals is common—about 1 million Australians (4.8%) aged 14 years or older reported recent non-medical use of a pharmaceutical drug. Prescriptions for opioid analgesics continued to increase and chronic pain and mental illness was higher among people with recent non-medical use of a pharmaceutical. Drug-induced deaths where benzodiazepines or other opioids like oxycodone and codeine were present, has more than doubled over the past decade.
- ISSN: 2205-5088 (PDF) 1447-6746 (Print)
- ISBN: 978-1-76054-266-5
- Cat. no: HSE 195
- Pages: 41
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1 million Australians (4.8%) aged 14 years or older misused a pharmaceutical drug in the previous 12 months
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Prescriptions for opioid analgesics continue to rise, increasing 24% between 2010–11 and 2014–15
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Over the past decade, drug-induced deaths were more likely to be due to prescription drugs than illegal drugs
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Chronic pain and mental illness is higher among people who used pharmaceuticals for
non-medical purposes