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Journal Article

Citation

Lee YH, Chang YC, Shelley M, López Castillo H. J. Psychiatr. Res. 2024; 175: 183-191.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2024, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.jpsychires.2024.05.010

PMID

38735263

Abstract

PURPOSE: This study examined the relationship between sexual identities and perception of risks associated with illicit drug use among a nationally representative sample of US adults.

METHODS: We analyzed data from five waves of the National Survey on Drug Use and Health (NSDUH, 2015-2019), with 205,418 adult participants. Six survey questions assessing participants' perceptions of the risks associated with illicit drug use (LSD, heroin, and cocaine) were subjected to principal component analysis. Sex-stratified ordered logistic regressions were used to explore potential disparities in perceptions regarding the risk associated with illicit drug use among sexual minority identifiers.

RESULTS: Among male participants, approximately 11.3% and 1.8% of them perceived illicit drug use as moderate and low risks, respectively. About 6.0% of female participants perceived illicit drug use as moderate risk, and 1.1% of female participants perceived it as low risk. The sex-stratified regression models demonstrated that participants who identified as lesbian/gay or bisexual all had higher odds of reporting low perception of illicit drug use risks as compared to their heterosexual counterparts (all p < 0.01).

CONCLUSIONS: Illicit drug use prevention strategies should consider risk perception disparities by sexual minority populations.


Language: en

Keywords

National survey on drug use and health; Perception of illicit drug use; Sexual minority

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