Codeine use and harms in Australia: evaluating the effects of re‐scheduling
2019
BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Globally, codeine is the most-used opioid. In December 2016, Australia announced that low-strength codeine ( 15 mg per dose unit) and low strength (= 15 mg). Only low-strength formulations were re-scheduled. FINDINGS: We observed an abrupt -50.8 percentage [95% confidence interval (CI) = -79.0 to -22.6%] level change in monthly codeine-related poisonings and no change in slope in the 12 months after February 2018. There was no increase in calls to the NSWPIC for high-strength products, level change: -37.2% (95% CI = -82.3 to 8%) or non-codeine opioids, level change: -4.4% (95% CI = -33.3 to 24.4%). Overall, the re-scheduling resulted in a level change in opioid calls of -35.8% calls/month (95% CI = -51.2 to -20.4%). Low-strength codeine sales decreased by 87.3% (95% CI = -88.5 to -85.9%), with no increase in high-strength codeine sales in the 14 months following re-scheduling, -4.0% (95% CI = -19.6 to 14.6%). CONCLUSIONS: Codeine re-scheduling in Australia appears to have reduced codeine misuse and sales.
Keywords:
- Correction
- Source
- Cite
- Save
- Machine Reading By IdeaReader
35
References
23
Citations
NaN
KQI