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Methamphetamine Use Among Adolescents & Young Adults

Methamphetamine Use Among Adolescents & Young Adults. Rachel Gonzales, Pre-Doctoral Fellow UCLA Integrated Substance Abuse Programs NPI - Semel Institute for Neuroscience. Presentation Objectives. Examine MA use trends among youth specific to the West Highlight unique gender differences

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Methamphetamine Use Among Adolescents & Young Adults

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  1. Methamphetamine Use Among Adolescents & Young Adults Rachel Gonzales, Pre-Doctoral Fellow UCLA Integrated Substance Abuse Programs NPI - Semel Institute for Neuroscience

  2. Presentation Objectives • Examine MA use trends among youth specific to the West • Highlight unique gender differences • Examine plausible risk factors associated with use • Future directions for research

  3. What do we know about the problem? • Most widely used sources: • National Survey on Drug Use and Health (NSDUH) • Monitoring the Future Study (MTF) • Youth Risk Behavior Survey (YRBS)

  4. Past MonthDrug Use Rates Source: NIDA, Monitoring the Future, Nat’l Results on Adolescent Drug Use, 2004.

  5. Measurement Challenges • While beneficial, national surveys tend to underrepresent youth at risk for drug use: • Dropouts and delinquent youth • Homeless and runaways • Foster care youth

  6. Other Sources • Adolescent Treatment Programs • Juvenile Justice System • Emergency Room Data • Reveal that MA use is a problem by young people.

  7. Primary Drug Problem Among Adolescent & Young Adult Treatment Admissions: 2004 17 years and under 18-25 years old Source: LA County ADPA, July 2003-April 2004

  8. Juvenile Justice Data • Since 2000, a significant proportion of juveniles aged 12 to 18 in CA have tested positive for dangerous drugs (including MA, PCP, and LSD) upon arrest. • In the second half of 2002, 22% of male arrestees aged 18 to 21 in Los Angeles County tested positive for MA. Source: Arrestee Drug Abuse Monitoring (ADAM) System

  9. Extent of Adolescent Drug Use Mentioned in DAWN ED System, LA-Long Beach, 2002 *Percent of all mentions for each substance

  10. Gender Differences MA use has become increasingly problematic among adolescent and young adult females

  11. Adolescent (<18) Treatment Admissions by Gender July 2003-April 2004 FEMALES MALES Source: LA county ADP

  12. Treatment Studies • Research on drug treatment outcome studies among adolescents is limited. • Very few published studies specific to MA and youth. • Recent articles on MA and youth in Taiwan growing.

  13. Matrix Treatment Study N=305 adolescents 13 to 18 years old N=90 N=215 Source: Rawson et al., 2005

  14. Matrix Treatment Study found: • Older teens (ages 17-18) more likely to use than younger youth. • Greater psychological & legal dysfunction than non-MA users. • More alcohol and drug use during treatment than non-MA users. • Greaterdrop out rates than non-MA users. • No injectors (14% smoke, 12% smoke/snort, 4% snort) Source: Rawson et al., 2005

  15. Phoenix House Treatment Found: • MA accounted for 42.3% of teen treatment admissions in 2005. • 16% increase in MA admissions between 2002 and 2005 (172 to 210). • More youth females are presenting for treatment with MA problem than males. Year Boys Girls 2002 25% 43% 2003 23% 51% 2004 27% 53% Source: CBS2 News Story, 2006

  16. MA Admission Trends: LA County 2000-05 N=5,527 Source: LA County ADP, 2006

  17. Gender Differences: LA County N=5,527 Source: LA County ADP, 2006

  18. MA Use by Ethnicity: LA County N=943 Source: LA County ADP, 2006

  19. 3 year CASA study on adolescents 8 to 22 years old found: • Females became dependent upon MA faster. • Females suffered more adverse effects sooner than males. Source: National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse at Columbia University, 2003

  20. Risk Factors for MA Use Largely understudied area

  21. Anecdotal Reports • Clinicians indicate low self-esteem, depressive symptoms, & eating disorder make girls especially vulnerable to use and continued misuse of MA • Deviant behavioral problems in males – ASPD, ADHD make males vulnerable to MA use (Yen & Chung, 2006)

  22. CASA Study: Female Risk Factors Physical Abuse Sexual Abuse Low Self Esteem MA Abuse Tension Depression Weight Concerns Source: National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse at Columbia University, 2003

  23. Risk Factors among adolescents in Matrix Treatment (Matrix Sample); p<.001

  24. Other Factors to Consider • Readily available to youth • Simple, home-made manufacturing • Cheap • Easy access to primary chemicals at local merchants

  25. Adolescent Story • One teen resident at Phoenix House who shared his story of MA addiction said: “When I first tried crystal meth, I automatically fell in love. I had finally found the drug that I was looking for. The stuff was pretty cheap and it was very easy for me to get.” Source: CBS2 News Story, 2006

  26. Clinical Characteristics • Cognitive dysfunction • Rapid mood swings • Hyperactivity & Impulsivity • Lesion-marked skin • Depression • Paranoia & Psychoses (auditory hallucinations)

  27. Risky Behaviors • Agitation & Aggressive Behaviors • Partner Violence • Multiple sex partners & unprotected sex • Suicide

  28. Relapse Antecedents for MA Use • Social pressure & Social In-adaptation • Lack of emotional stability • Low educational level • Psychiatric Disorder Status Yen & Chang, 2005 (Taiwanese sample, N=60)

  29. Summary: Key Points • Researchers need to be aware of other critical data sources to understand the scope of MA use among youth • It remains unclear which risk factors are occurring for MA use and between the sexes

  30. Future Research • More studies to look at specific risk factors for MA use & relapse • Other study populations should include: • Homeless/runaway youth • Juvenile justice system youth • Child welfare system (foster care) youth • Issues of HIV Risk Behaviors and Violence • Developmental processes

  31. Acknowledgments Richard Rawson Beth Rutkowski CA Department Alcohol & Drugs LA County Department Alcohol & Drugs Jim Peck

  32. Questions? For copies of slides or a reference list, please contact me at: rachelmg@ucla.edu (310) 445-0874 ext. 346

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