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      What are the patterns between depression, smoking, unhealthy alcohol use, and other substance use among individuals receiving medical care? A longitudinal study of 5,479 participants

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          Abstract

          Objective

          To evaluate and characterize the structure of temporal patterns of depression, smoking, unhealthy alcohol use, and other substance use among individuals receiving medical care, and to inform discussion about whether integrated screening and treatment strategies for these conditions are warranted.

          Methods

          Using the Veterans Aging Cohort Study (VACS) we measured depression, smoking, unhealthy alcohol use and other substance use (stimulants, marijuana, heroin, opioids) and evaluated which conditions tended to co-occur within individuals, and how this co-occurrence was temporally structured (i.e. concurrently, sequentially, or discordantly).

          Results

          Current depression was associated with current use of every substance examined with the exception of unhealthy alcohol use. Current unhealthy alcohol use and marijuana use were also consistently associated. Current status was strongly predicted by prior status (p<0.0001; OR=2.99–22.34) however, there were few other sequential relationships. Associations in the HIV infected and uninfected subgroups were largely the same with the following exceptions. Smoking preceded unhealthy alcohol use and current smoking was associated with current depression in the HIV infected subgroup only (p<0.001; OR=1.33–1.41 and p<0.001; OR=1.25–1.43). Opioid use and current unhealthy alcohol use were negatively associated only in the HIV negative subgroup (p=0.01; OR=0.75).

          Conclusions

          Patterns of depression, smoking, unhealthy alcohol use, and other substance use were temporally concordant, particularly with regard to depression and substance use. These patterns may inform future development of more integrated screening and treatment strategies.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          9712133
          21042
          AIDS Behav
          AIDS Behav
          AIDS and behavior
          1090-7165
          1573-3254
          14 June 2017
          July 2017
          01 July 2018
          : 21
          : 7
          : 2014-2022
          Affiliations
          [1 ]Department of Population Health, New York University School of Medicine, New York, NY, US
          [2 ]Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT, US
          [3 ]National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD, US
          Author notes
          [* ]Corresponding Author: 227 East 30th street, Floor 6 Room 615, New York, NY 10016, Phone: 212-263-4964, Fax: 646-501-2706, Scott.Braithwaite@ 123456nyumc.org
          Article
          PMC5542002 PMC5542002 5542002 nihpa807152
          10.1007/s10461-016-1492-9
          5542002
          27475945
          b4fd9439-4558-498b-9766-af67c0348a15
          History
          Categories
          Article

          Substance use,Depression,Smoking,HIV,Alcohol use
          Substance use, Depression, Smoking, HIV, Alcohol use

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