The association with heroin initiation was stronger for teens using nonmedical prescription opioids than for those using nonopioid substances.
Adolescents commonly obtain prescription opioids from friends and family for nonmedical reasons. Cross-sectional reports have suggested an association between prior nonmedical opioid prescription use and subsequent initiation of heroin.
In a longitudinal cohort study, researchers surveyed 3396 students at 10 high schools in Los Angeles every 6 months for 42 months, starting in ninth grade. Students who had used heroin at baseline were excluded. The remaining cohort of 3298 participants was 54% girls and 48% Hispanic, 17% Asian, 16% non-Hispanic white, and 5% African-American.
Seventy students (2.1%) initiated heroin by 42 months; they were more likely to be boys and to report lower parental monitoring and higher delinquent behavior at baselin…
Reviewing Author
DisclosuresConsultant/Advisory BoardEli Lilly and Company; Advisory Council, Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development; Subboard for Adolescent Medicine, American Board of Pediatrics
Grant/Research SupportPatty Brisben Foundation
Editorial BoardsOsteoporosis International; Bone; Journal of Adolescent Health
DisclosuresConsultant/Advisory BoardEli Lilly and Company; Advisory Council, Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development; Subboard for Adolescent Medicine, American Board of Pediatrics
Grant/Research SupportPatty Brisben Foundation
Editorial BoardsOsteoporosis International; Bone; Journal of Adolescent Health