4.6 Article

Twenty-five years of volatile substance abuse mortality: a national mortality surveillance programme

Journal

ADDICTION
Volume 108, Issue 2, Pages 385-393

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1111/j.1360-0443.2012.04047.x

Keywords

Aerosols; gas fuels; glues; mortality; solvents; volatile substance abuse

Funding

  1. charity Re-Solv through Big Lottery
  2. Department of Health
  3. GSK
  4. Medical Research Council [G0801056B] Funding Source: researchfish

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Aims To investigate trends in volatile substance abuse (VSA) deaths over 25 years. Design A national mortality surveillance programme with standardised data collection procedures. Setting The UK and islands. Participants/Measurements All VSA deaths, 19832007. Findings In the five quinquennia from 1983 to 2007 the numbers of VSA deaths were 499, 609, 378, 349 and 258 respectively. There were gradual increases in the mean age at death in males and females and in the number of VSA deaths in women. Coincident with the 1992 Department of Health Advertising Campaign, VSA deaths in boys and girls (<18 years of age) fell by an estimated 56% (95% CI: 36%70%) and 64% (20%84%), respectively, from the underlying trend, but there was no evidence of any similar step change in either group following the 1999 Legislation prohibiting sales of cigarette lighter refills containing butane to those under the age of 18 years. Between 19831987 and 20032007, the ratio of aerosol to gas fuel deaths fell by an estimated 80% (57% to 91%) in adults, while the ratio of glue to gas fuel deaths fell by an estimated 95% (89% to 97%) in adults and an estimated 87% (-1% to 98%) in children. Conclusions Between 1983 and 2007, in the United Kingdom, the numbers of deaths associated with volatile substance abuse peaked in the early 1990s and fell to their lowest level in the mid-2000s. The age at death increased in both males and females. There was a fall in the proportion of volatile substance abuse deaths involving glues and a rise, particularly in adults, in the proportion involving gas fuels.

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