Data from: Use of novel psychoactive substances by inpatients on general adult psychiatric wards

  • Jack L Stanley (Creator)
  • Daniel V Mogford (Creator)
  • Rebecca J. Lawrence (Creator)
  • Stephen Lawrie (Creator)

Dataset

Description

Objectives: Non-illicit alternatives to controlled drugs, known as Novel Psychoactive Substances (NPS) have recently risen to prominence. They are readily available with uncertain pharmacology and no widely available assay. Given that psychiatric patients are at risk of comorbid substance abuse, we hypothesized that NPS use would be present in the psychiatric population, and sought to determine its prevalence and investigate the characteristics of those who use these drugs with a retrospective review of discharge letters. Setting: General adult inpatient wards of a psychiatric hospital in a Scottish city. Participants: All adult inpatients (18-65) discharged from general psychiatric wards between 1/7/14 and 31/12/14. 483 admissions identified, 46 were admissions for maintenance ECT and were excluded. Of the remaining 437 admissions, 49 discharge letters were unobtainable, leaving 388 admissions to analyze. Primary outcome measure: The mention or lack thereof of NPS use in discharge letters was our planned primary outcome measure and was also the primary outcome measure we used in our analysis. Results: NPS use was identified in 22.2% of admissions, contributing to psychiatric symptoms in 59.3%. In comparison to non-users, NPS users were younger (p

Data Citation

Stanley, Jack L.; Mogford, Daniel V.; Lawrence, Rebecca J.; Lawrie, Stephen M. (2016), Data from: Use of novel psychoactive substances by inpatients on general adult psychiatric wards, Dryad, Dataset, https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.gp545
Date made available2016
PublisherDryad

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