4.6 Article

Codeine use and harms in Australia: evaluating the effects of re-scheduling

期刊

ADDICTION
卷 115, 期 3, 页码 451-459

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/add.14798

关键词

codeine; re-scheduling; substance misuse; legislative change; opioids; policy; poisons centres

资金

  1. National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) Translational Australian Clinical Toxicology (TACT) Program Grant [1055176]
  2. NHMRC Centre of Research Excellence in Medicines and Ageing [1060407]
  3. NHMRC Early Career Fellowship [1158763]
  4. UNSW Scientia PhD Scholarship

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Background and aims Globally, codeine is the most-used opioid. In December 2016, Australia announced that low-strength codeine (<= 15 mg) would be re-scheduled and no longer available for purchase over-the-counter; this was implemented in February 2018. We aimed to evaluate the effect of this scheduling change on codeine misuse and use and misuse of other opioids. Design and setting Interrupted time-series analysis of monthly opioid exposure calls to New South Wales Poisons Information Centre (NSWPIC, captures 50% of Australia's poisoning calls), January 2015- January 2019 and monthly national codeine sales, March 2015-March 2019. We incorporated a washout period (January 2017 - January 2018) between the announcement and implementation, when prescriber/consumer behaviour may have been influenced. Participants Intentional opioid overdoses resulting in a call to NSWPIC. Measurements We used linear segmented regression to identify abrupt changes in level and slope of fitted lines. Codeine poisonings and sales were stratified into high strength (> 15 mg per dose unit) and low strength (<= 15 mg). Only low-strength formulations were re-scheduled. Findings We observed an abrupt -50.8 percentage [95% confidence interval (CI) = -79.0 to -22.6%] level change in monthly codeine-related poisonings and no change in slope in the 12 months after February 2018. There was no increase in calls to the NSWPIC for high-strength products, level change: -37.2% (95% CI = -82.3 to 8%) or non-codeine opioids, level change: -4.4% (95% CI = -33.3 to 24.4%). Overall, the re-scheduling resulted in a level change in opioid calls of -35.8% calls/month (95% CI = -51.2 to -20.4%). Low-strength codeine sales decreased by 87.3% (95% CI = -88.5 to -85.9%), with no increase in high-strength codeine sales in the 14 months following re-scheduling, -4.0% (95% CI = -19.6 to 14.6%). Conclusions Codeine re-scheduling in Australia appears to have reduced codeine misuse and sales.

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