• Journal of women's health · May 2024

    Social Determinants Associated with Substance Use and Treatment Seeking in Females of Reproductive Age in the United States.

    • Holly Horan, Alyssa Thompson, Kendall Willard, Emmily Mobley, Justin McDaniel, Ellen Robertson, Shanna McIntosh, and David L Albright.
    • The University of Alabama at Birmingham, Heersink School of Medicine, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Birmingham, Alabama, USA.
    • J Womens Health (Larchmt). 2024 May 1; 33 (5): 584593584-593.

    AbstractIntroduction: Females of reproductive age (FoRA; 15-49 years) are the demographic most likely to be diagnosed with a substance use disorder. Preventative treatment prior to or during pregnancy is critical. Stigma and social inequities can delay access to care. There is limited research examining social determinants of health (SDoH) and how they are related to substance use and treatment seeking in this demographic. Methods: We analyzed the 2016-2019 data from the United States National Survey on Drug Use and Health using multivariable logistic regression models. Statistically significant variables were conceptually linked to the Office of Disease Prevention and Health Promotion's (ODPHP's) SDoH framework's five domains. Results: From a total sample of 1,477,336 (weighted) pregnant people and 39,600,523 (weighted) FoRA, substance use was reported by 879,209 (2.14% [95% confidence interval = 2.13-2.15]). Pregnancy status was not associated with substance use or treatment seeking. Past-month substance use was associated with high educational attainment, an annual income <$20,000, a history of criminality, low religiosity, and having health insurance. Past-month treatment-seeking behavior was associated with older age, an annual income >$20,000, a history of criminality, and greater religiosity. Behavioral health support seeking in the past month was associated with some college education. Higher depression severity was associated with all the three models. Conclusions: Using the ODPHP's SDoH framework, we begin to elicit critical connections that can describe substance use and treatment-seeking practices in FoRA. We encourage additional research to inform public health, health care, behavioral health, and other support service programming.

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