• J Opioid Manag · Jul 2013

    The misuse of prescription pain medication and borderline personality symptomatology.

    • Randy A Sansone, Daron A Watts, and Michael W Wiederman.
    • Professor, Departments of Psychiatry and Internal Medicine, Wright State University School of Medicine, Dayton, Ohio; Director, Psychiatry Education, Kettering Medical Center, Kettering, Ohio.
    • J Opioid Manag. 2013 Jul 1; 9 (4): 275-9.

    ObjectiveDespite the known high rates of substance misuse among individuals with borderline personality disorder (BPD), little empirical data are available regarding the explicit nature of such misuse with prescribed pain medications-the focus of the present study.SettingA primary care outpatient setting, with predominantly resident providers, in a midsized mid-western US city.PatientsConsecutive outpatients who currently or have previously been prescribed pain medication (ie, lifetime pain medication exposure) (n = 185).Main Outcome MeasuresRelationships between BPD, according to two measures, and eight author-developed items reflecting prescription pain medication misuse.ResultsWith the exception of requesting a prescription for pain medication but not having pain (n.s.), all other measures of prescription pain medication misuse were statistically significantly associated with BPD symptoms. There were also some statistically significant interactions between male gender and BPD symptoms in the prediction of pain medication misuse (ie, mixing prescribed pain medications with drugs to get high, using prescribed pain medication for recreational purposes, and selling prescribed pain medications for money).ConclusionsIndividuals with BPD are at risk for misusing prescribed pain medications, and this is especially evident regarding particular forms of misuse among men with BPD symptomatology.

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