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Original Research

Recent national trends in Salvia divinorum use and substance-use disorders among recent and former Salvia divinorum users compared with nonusers

, , , &
Pages 53-68 | Published online: 04 Apr 2011
 

Abstract

Context

Media and scientific reports have indicated an increase in recreational use of Salvia divinorum. Epidemiological data are lacking on the trends, prevalence, and correlates of S. divinorum use in large representative samples, as well as the extent of substance use and mental health problems among S. divinorum users.

Objective

To examine the national trend in prevalence of S. divinorum use and to identify sociodemographic, behavioral, mental health, and substance-use profiles of recent (past-year) and former users of S. divinorum.

Design

Analyses of public-use data files from the 2006–2008 United States National Surveys on Drug Use and Health (N = 166,453).

Setting

Noninstitutionalized individuals aged 12 years or older were interviewed in their places of residence.

Main measures

Substance use, S. divinorum, self-reported substance use disorders, criminality, depression, and mental health treatment were assessed by standardized survey questions administered by the audio computer-assisted self-interviewing method.

Results

Among survey respondents, lifetime prevalence of S. divinorum use had increased from 0.7% in 2006 to 1.3% in 2008 (an 83% increase). S. divinorum use was associated with ages 18–25 years, male gender, white or multiple race, residence of large metropolitan areas, arrests for criminal activities, and depression. S. divinorum use was particularly common among recent drug users, including users of lysergic acid diethylamide (53.7%), ecstasy (30.1%), heroin (24.2%), phencyclidine (22.4%), and cocaine (17.5%). Adjusted multinomial logistic analyses indicated polydrug use as the strongest determinant for recent and former S. divinorum use. An estimated 43.0% of past-year S. divinorum users and 28.9% of former S. divinorum users had an illicit or nonmedical drug-use disorder compared with 2.5% of nonusers. Adjusted logistic regression analyses showed that recent and former S. divinorum users had greater odds of having past-year depression and a substance-use disorder (alcohol or drugs) than past-year alcohol or drug users who did not use S. divinorum.

Conclusion

S. divinorum use is prevalent among recent or active drug users who have used other hallucinogens or stimulants. The high prevalence of substance use disorders among recent S. divinorum users emphasizes the need to study health risks of drug interactions.

Acknowledgments

This article was supported primarily by research grants from the US National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health (R01DA019623, R33DA027503, and R01DA019901 to L-T Wu). GE Woody was supported by K05DA017009 and U10DA013043. J-H Li was supported by the Committee on Chinese Medicine and Pharmacy (CCMP100-CP-006) and the Food and Drug Administration (DOH100-FDA-61402) of the Department of Health, Taiwan. Its contents are solely the responsibility of the authors and do not necessarily represent the official views of the National Institutes of Health. The Substance Abuse and Mental Health Data Archive provided the public use data files for NSDUH, which was sponsored by the Office of Applied Studies of the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration. We thank Amanda McMillan for her editorial assistance.

Ethical approval

GE Woody is a member of the RADARS post-marketing study external advisory group, whose job is to assess abuse of prescription medications. Denver Health administers RADARS, and nine pharmaceutical companies currently support its work. The other authors have no conflicts of interest to disclose.

Disclosure

This work was approved by the Duke University Institutional Review Board.