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Drug Use is Transmitted from Old to Young
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Researchers at the听91porn视频 听show that the generation a person was born into鈥擲ilent Generation, Baby Boomer, Generation X or Millennial鈥攕trongly predicts how likely they are to die from a drug overdose, and at what age. These results appear in听.听
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鈥淪ociological imprinting marks a person born in a given time,鈥 said senior author听, who holds the Jonas Salk Chair of Population Health and is dean emeritus of Pitt Public Health. 鈥淚t reflects attitudes they encountered right at the time of adolescence, and attitudes about drug use鈥攖hose stay for a lifetime.鈥
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Up until now, research into the demographics of drug use has focused more on age, finding that midlife is the riskiest time for drug-related death, but Burke and colleagues saw that the year a person was born also has a large effect.
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For the study, lead author听, assistant professor of health policy and management at Pitt Public Health, analyzed 661,565 drug overdose deaths reported by the听Centers for Disease Control and Prevention听from 1979 to 2017, plotting death rate as a function of both age and either birth year or generation.
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The data clearly showed that the overdose epidemic emerged abruptly among the Baby Boomers, shifted youth-ward for Generation X, and then soared to new heights among the Millennials.
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These phases map onto the previously identified drug waves that came with the waxing and waning popularity of prescription opioids, heroin and fentanyl, each in turn.
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Peering within each generation, Jalal and colleagues saw a steady march toward greater overdose risk at younger ages for each successive birth year, which they found quite surprising.
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鈥淭here鈥檚 no reason why the lines should be fanning like this,鈥 Jalal said. 鈥淚f you look at breast cancer, for example, or any other mortality curves, they don鈥檛 look like that.鈥
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It鈥檚 not clear why this is happening, Jalal said, but the pattern is too clean to chalk up to chance. And an overall rise in drug overdose deaths鈥攁lthough that is happening in the background of these data鈥攄oes not explain away the results presented in this study.听听
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Burke uses an analogy borrowed from infectious diseases to explain the progressive shift of drug overdose deaths to younger ages.
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鈥淭here is an epidemic going on. And just like an infectious disease, there is a transmission,鈥 said Burke, also a professor in Pitt Public Health鈥檚听. 鈥淚n this case, it propagates from older to younger age groups.鈥澨
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Burke hopes that the highly regular patterns uncovered in this analysis will give policy makers a tool for testing whether their measures to curb drug overdose deaths are working over the long term鈥攁ny effective intervention should disrupt the pattern.听听
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Additional authors on the study are Jeanine Buchanich, David Sinclair and Mark Roberts, all of Pitt Public Health. Funding was provided by the听National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences听and the听Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.