Non-medical use of opioid analgesics in contemporary Brazil: Findings from the 2015 Brazilian National Household Survey on Substance Use
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Glob Public Health
Abstract
Prior studies on substance use in Brazil have not focused on opioid misuse, previously thought to
be nearly non-existent. This paper presents new findings on heroin and non-medical use of opioid
analgesics. Data come from the 2015 Brazilian Household Survey on Substance Use (BHSU-3), a
nationally representative survey estimating epidemiological parameters related to substance use by
residents across Brazil. BHSU-3 used stratified multi-stage probability sampling across multiple
geographic domains of interest, resulting in 16,273 interviews with household residents. Lifetime
heroin use among Brazilians was 0.3 (95% C.I:0.2–0.4). Lifetime, past-year, and past-month non medical use of opioid analgesics were respectively 2.9 (95%C.I.:2.3–3.4), 1.4 (95%C.I.:1.1–1.7)
and 0.6 (95%C.I.:0.4–0.8). Past-year prevalence of non-medical opioid analgesics use was lower
among males [Prevalence Ratio (PR): 0.54 (95% C.I.:0.36–0.78)], those aged 12–24 [0.56 (95%
C.I.:0.34–0.92)], persons with monthly family incomes between R$1,501–3,000 [0.59 (95%
C.I.:0.38–0.92)] or greater than R$3,000 [0.64 (95% C.I.:0.42–0.98)], and persons who were
unemployed [0.65 (95% C.I.:0.46–0.92)]. Non-medical use of opioids in Brazil may be more
prevalent than previously recognised. Proper measurement and evaluation of opioid misuse across
Brazil and other Latin American countries is critical to understand and prevent opioid-related
harms.