• Int. J. Drug Policy · Sep 2010

    Older and sicker: Changing mortality of drug users in treatment in the North West of England.

    • Caryl Beynon, Jim McVeigh, Ayesha Hurst, and Adam Marr.
    • Centre for Public Health Research Directorate, Liverpool John Moores University, Castle House, North Street, Liverpool L3 2AY, United Kingdom. c.m.beynon@ljmu.ac.uk
    • Int. J. Drug Policy. 2010 Sep 1; 21 (5): 429-31.

    BackgroundThe study examines the age at which drug users die and ascertains whether there is a significant difference in the causes of death ('drug related' versus 'non-drug related') according to age.MethodsDetails of people reported to the North West of England's National Drug Treatment Monitoring System as dying (years 2003/2004-2007/2008) were matched by the Office for National Statistics to death notifications to identify the cause and date of death. Spearman's rank correlation was performed on median age at death by year. Mantel-Haenszel statistics tested the association between age and type of death, adjusted for year.ResultsCauses of death were ascertained for 504 people. Median age at death increased significantly from 36.46 in 2003/2004 to 41.38 in 2007/2008. The odds of a person aged 40 and over dying from a non-drug related death were 3.27 the odds of a person aged less than 40 dying from a non-drug related death.ConclusionCurrent focus on drug related deaths detracts attention from other causes; in particular, the types of death which disproportionately affect older drug users. Ongoing debates about reintegration into society and employment presuppose that drug users are of working age and are healthy enough to work.Copyright 2010 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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