Table 1.
Motives* | Adolescents (12–17 y; A) | Young Adults (18–25 y; B) | 26–34 y (C) | 35–49 y (D) | ≥50 y (E) | Pairwise Comparisons‡ |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Sample size | (N = 977) | (N = 2,156) | (N = 1,229) | (N = 1,049) | (N = 415) | |
% (95% CI) | % (95% CI) | % (95% CI) | % (95% CI) | |||
To relieve pain | 56.1 (51.9–60.3) | 59.6 (56.6–62.5) | 69.7 (66.6–72.7) | 76.4 (73.5–79.0) | 84.7 (79.1–89.0) | A, B < C < D < E |
To relax | 27.8 (24.1–31.7) | 32.5 (29.7–35.4) | 31.6 (28.5–34.9) | 23.2 (20.4–26.3) | 17.4 (12.7–23.3) | D, E < A, B, C |
To experiment | 15.6 (12.8–18.8) | 12.5 (10.7–14.4) | 5.4 (3.7–7.6) | 1.7 (0.9–3.0) | 1.4 (0.7–3.1) | D, E < C < B < A |
To get high | 25.8 (22.5–29.4) | 31.9 (29.7–34.2) | 25.8 (22.5–29.4) | 16.1 (13.2–19.5) | 6.9 (4.7–10.2) | E < D < C < B;E, D < A |
To sleep | 14.4 (12.0–17.2) | 17.4 (15.1–20.0) | 14.9 (12.1–18.1) | 12.6 (10.3–15.2) | 16.4 (12.5–21.2) | D < B |
To help with emotions | 14.1 (11.3–17.4) | 14.1 (12.3–16.0) | 10.8 (9.1–12.7) | 8.7 (6.8–11.0) | 6.3 (4.1–9.7) | D, E < A, B;E < C;C < B |
To alter other drug effects | 2.0 (1.2–3.3) | 3.7 (3.1–4.5) | 3.0 (1.9–4.5) | 1.5 (0.8–2.8) | 1.2 (0.5–2.9) | D, E < B |
Because I am “hooked” | 0.9 (0.4–1.9) | 3.2 (2.3–4.4) | 5.6 (4.3–7.3) | 3.4 (2.3–5.0) | 1.5 (0.7–3.4) | A < B, C, D;B, D, E < C |
Other reason | 5.2 (3.8–7.1) | 2.6 (1.8–3.7) | 2.2 (1.5–3.2) | 3.0 (2.0–4.4) | 1.3 (0.5–3.4) | B, C, D, E < A |
Motive category† | ||||||
Pain relief only | 38.4 (34.4–42.6) | 35.1 (32.2–38.2) | 43.6 (39.9–47.5) | 55.0 (51.3–58.7) | 65.4 (58.6–71.6) | Base outcome |
Non–pain relief only | 43.9 (39.7–48.2) | 40.4 (37.5–43.4) | 30.3 (27.3–33.4) | 23.7 (21.0–26.6) | 15.3 (11.0–20.9) | E < D < C < A, B |
Mixed motives | 17.7 (14.8–21.1) | 24.5 (21.9–27.3) | 26.1 (22.8–29.6) | 21.4 (18.3–24.8) | 19.3 (15.2–24.2) | D, E < B, C;E < A;A < B |
Source: 2015–16 NSDUH surveys.
CI = confidence interval; NSDUH = National Survey on Drug Use and Health; POM = prescription opioid misuse.
Individual opioid motives are not mutually exclusive (i.e., “select as many as apply”) and are from the last POM episode in those with past-year POM.
Motive category variables are mutually exclusive and are based on the individual opioid motives selected by respondents.
Pairwise comparisons are based on logistic or multinomial logistic models that control for sex, race/ethnicity, household income, and population density of residence; significant listed differences are Bonferroni-corrected for 10 comparisons (P ≤ 0.005).