Psychiatric disorders are overlooked in patients with drug abuse

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Standard

Psychiatric disorders are overlooked in patients with drug abuse. / Kruckow, Line; Linnet, Kristian; Banner, Jytte.

I: Danish Medical Journal, Bind 63, Nr. 3, A5207, 03.2016.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Kruckow, L, Linnet, K & Banner, J 2016, 'Psychiatric disorders are overlooked in patients with drug abuse', Danish Medical Journal, bind 63, nr. 3, A5207. <http://www.danmedj.dk/portal/page/portal/danmedj.dk/dmj_forside/PAST_ISSUE/2016/DMJ_2016_03/A5207>

APA

Kruckow, L., Linnet, K., & Banner, J. (2016). Psychiatric disorders are overlooked in patients with drug abuse. Danish Medical Journal, 63(3), [A5207]. http://www.danmedj.dk/portal/page/portal/danmedj.dk/dmj_forside/PAST_ISSUE/2016/DMJ_2016_03/A5207

Vancouver

Kruckow L, Linnet K, Banner J. Psychiatric disorders are overlooked in patients with drug abuse. Danish Medical Journal. 2016 mar.;63(3). A5207.

Author

Kruckow, Line ; Linnet, Kristian ; Banner, Jytte. / Psychiatric disorders are overlooked in patients with drug abuse. I: Danish Medical Journal. 2016 ; Bind 63, Nr. 3.

Bibtex

@article{34633f8d5d5c40949e94617c8bf3d1c3,
title = "Psychiatric disorders are overlooked in patients with drug abuse",
abstract = "Introduction: Psychiatric disease is overlooked in drug users. Patients with both drug abuse and a psychiatric disease – dual diagnosis – suffer decreased compliance to treatment and decreased life expectancy compared with single-diagnosis patients. Identifying the patients among ­either drug addicts or mentally ill patients is difficult.Methods: All drug addicts autopsied at the Department of Forensic Medicine, University of Copenhagen, Denmark, in the years 1992, 2002 and 2012 were included. The group was divided into two subpopulations of possible dual diagnosis patients either according to police reports stating mental illness or to psychotropics found in the toxicology screening after autopsy.Results: We found a rise in possible mental illness in both subpopulations in the study period. Drug addicts with psychotropics in the blood at the time of death increased from 3.1% in 1992 to 48.1% in 2012, and this group was significantly younger at the time of death than those without ­psychotropics in the blood. 
Conclusion: Suspected dual diagnosis patients have increased in number. They die earlier than their drug addict counterparts. Methadone remains the leading cause of death in all subpopulations. Possible causes are misuse of treatment and/or illegally bought methadone, wrongly ­assigned cause of death due to unknown tolerance and/or polydrug toxicity in combination with psychotropic medicine.",
author = "Line Kruckow and Kristian Linnet and Jytte Banner",
year = "2016",
month = mar,
language = "English",
volume = "63",
journal = "Danish Medical Journal",
issn = "2245-1919",
publisher = "Almindelige Danske Laegeforening",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Psychiatric disorders are overlooked in patients with drug abuse

AU - Kruckow, Line

AU - Linnet, Kristian

AU - Banner, Jytte

PY - 2016/3

Y1 - 2016/3

N2 - Introduction: Psychiatric disease is overlooked in drug users. Patients with both drug abuse and a psychiatric disease – dual diagnosis – suffer decreased compliance to treatment and decreased life expectancy compared with single-diagnosis patients. Identifying the patients among ­either drug addicts or mentally ill patients is difficult.Methods: All drug addicts autopsied at the Department of Forensic Medicine, University of Copenhagen, Denmark, in the years 1992, 2002 and 2012 were included. The group was divided into two subpopulations of possible dual diagnosis patients either according to police reports stating mental illness or to psychotropics found in the toxicology screening after autopsy.Results: We found a rise in possible mental illness in both subpopulations in the study period. Drug addicts with psychotropics in the blood at the time of death increased from 3.1% in 1992 to 48.1% in 2012, and this group was significantly younger at the time of death than those without ­psychotropics in the blood. 
Conclusion: Suspected dual diagnosis patients have increased in number. They die earlier than their drug addict counterparts. Methadone remains the leading cause of death in all subpopulations. Possible causes are misuse of treatment and/or illegally bought methadone, wrongly ­assigned cause of death due to unknown tolerance and/or polydrug toxicity in combination with psychotropic medicine.

AB - Introduction: Psychiatric disease is overlooked in drug users. Patients with both drug abuse and a psychiatric disease – dual diagnosis – suffer decreased compliance to treatment and decreased life expectancy compared with single-diagnosis patients. Identifying the patients among ­either drug addicts or mentally ill patients is difficult.Methods: All drug addicts autopsied at the Department of Forensic Medicine, University of Copenhagen, Denmark, in the years 1992, 2002 and 2012 were included. The group was divided into two subpopulations of possible dual diagnosis patients either according to police reports stating mental illness or to psychotropics found in the toxicology screening after autopsy.Results: We found a rise in possible mental illness in both subpopulations in the study period. Drug addicts with psychotropics in the blood at the time of death increased from 3.1% in 1992 to 48.1% in 2012, and this group was significantly younger at the time of death than those without ­psychotropics in the blood. 
Conclusion: Suspected dual diagnosis patients have increased in number. They die earlier than their drug addict counterparts. Methadone remains the leading cause of death in all subpopulations. Possible causes are misuse of treatment and/or illegally bought methadone, wrongly ­assigned cause of death due to unknown tolerance and/or polydrug toxicity in combination with psychotropic medicine.

M3 - Journal article

VL - 63

JO - Danish Medical Journal

JF - Danish Medical Journal

SN - 2245-1919

IS - 3

M1 - A5207

ER -

ID: 173282999