Mortality rates amongst drug users in relation to time after hospital discharge

Illustration of man addicted to drugs

People with substance misuse problems often present to services with complex physical and mental health needs.  Studies in the UK have indicated that common mental health problems are the norm in people in treatment for substance misuse. Weaver et al (2003) found 70% of people in treatment for substance misuse in London also had a mental health problem; most commonly depression, anxiety and personality disorders. A more recent study in Leeds has found similar rates of comorbidity (Delgadillo et al, 2013).

In addition to mental health problems people with drug misuse problems have a greater risk of physical health problems associated directly from drug use (such as blood borne viruses from injecting) as well as health risks associated with a drug using lifestyle. A major cause of premature death amongst drug users is accidental over-dose (Ghodse et al 2012) and this can be as a result of lowered tolerance (after a detox for example or prison stay), misjudging effects of a combination of drugs, and/or an increase in strength of the street drugs. So it is likely that drug users will also require treatment from mental health and general health services.

Illicit drug users face a high risk of death in the immediate two week period folowing release from prison

Illicit drug users face a high risk of death in the immediate two week period following release from prison

Previous research (Merrell et al, 2010) has established that there is a high risk of death in the immediate two week period of release from prison, and recommendations are that people with a history of drug use should be offered immediate support from local services on release. However, it is not been examined if there is a similar risk after release from hospital.

Aims

The aim of the study was to investigate mortality rates amongst drug users in relation to time after discharge from hospital, specifically focusing on drug related deaths (DRD) and non-drug related death (suicide).

Methods

This was a cohort study using data linked to 69 457 people who were registered for drug treatment from April 1996 – March 2006.

  • Population: substance misusers identified within the Scottish Drug Misuse Database.
  • Time at risk was calculated as date of first attendance to drug services to death, or end of study, and categorised according to time since most recent hospitalisation.
  • Main outcome was DRD.  This was defined as all deaths recorded with an ICD-10 code indicating mental or behavioural disorder due to psychoactive substance misuse, accidental poisoning, intentional self-poisoning, assault by drugs medicaments and biological substances, and poisoning with undetermined intent.  Non-DRD were defined as any suicide excluding those above.

There were four categories of “time to death”: within 28 days, 29-90 days, 91 days to 1 year, and >1 year and these were compared with those “never admitted” to hospital.

Results

the time periods closest to discharge from hospital were associated with increased risk of drug related deaths

The time immediately after discharge from hospital was associated with an increased risk of drug related deaths

  • Overall in the 10 year period, out of 69 457 individuals, there were 2590 deaths recorded (3.72%).  Of these over half were recorded as Drug-Related Deaths, and 10% non-DRD (i.e. suicide).
  • In the analysis of the links between time after discharge and death, the time periods closest to discharge from hospital were associated with increased risk of DRD.
  • Death during hospitalisation associated with greater risk of DRD and non-DRD.
  • The greatest risk of death occurred within 28 days (Hazard Ratio [HR] 9.6; 95% CI 8-12) and reduced as time period grew longer.
  • The risk of death also increased if there were more hospitalisations.

Conclusions

People with substance misuse problems have a greater risk of death in the immediate month after discharge from hospital.  Characteristics of being an alcohol user, an injecting drug user, and having a hepatitis C diagnosis increases this risk.  These findings mirror the findings of research examining deaths after prison and discharge from drug treatments. It is important to note that these deaths are avoidable, and all services need to consider how they can play a role in prevention strategies for this marginalised group.

The authors recommend employing drug liaison nurses in hospitals to help reduce drug related deaths

The authors recommend employing drug liaison nurses in hospitals to help reduce drug related deaths

The recommendation of the paper is for hospitals to have a greater role in reducing these risks.  Three suggestions are made:

  1. Drug liaison nurses at hospital who can raise awareness of risks to service users.
  2. Hospitals alerting GPs as part of discharge process.
  3. Hospitals to have naloxone (heroin antidote) for users to take away as it is available for prisoners on release from prison.

However, an important point to note is that the hospitalisations were relatively brief with a quarter not involving an over-night stay.  This suggests that some of the deaths are unlikely to be linked to lowered tolerance (as in after a period of weeks or months in prison).

Strengths

This paper has been able to analyse data from large data-sets which makes the findings both robust and generalisable (to drug users who attend drug treatment).

Limitations

Health services should recognise the heightened risks associated with substance misuse and provide the necessary care and discharge plans to help minimise this risk

Health services should recognise the heightened risks associated with substance misuse and provide the necessary care and discharge plans to help minimise this risk

Routine data sets are problematic as they may not be accurate (i.e events wrongly coded when inputted in the system) and also may under-report actual events by omission of data.  The authors admit that despite methods used for accurate linkage there is a small chance of some errors within the dataset.  Analysis of routine data-sets such as this can identify a pattern, but can’t answer deeper questions about specific relationships and why this is occurring.  This analysis only included drug users who had attended for drug treatment and therefore not all drug users in Scotland.  In addition, the authors did not differentiate between types of hospital admissions and this could have been useful in identifying which conditions are associated with greater risk.  For example it may be that this increased risk is being mediated by accidental overdoses which is a marker for a person who is engaging in significant health risks, and is at increased risk of dying.  It would have been useful to compare risks associated with discharge from psychiatric hospital compared with general medical hospitals.  Again, we are not sure from this analysis whether the risk of death is associated with underlying mental health issues.

It is clear that there is a need for further research to fully understand the link between hospital discharge and death in order to develop and test preventative strategies where they would have most impact.  However, in the meantime, all health services should recognise the heightened risks associated with substance misuse and provide the necessary care and discharge plans to help minimise this risk.  This group of people have complex health and social needs and are often marginalised and stigmatised.  The rate of premature mortality in this group is high and reflects a significant health inequality that needs to be addressed.

If you need help

If you need help and support now and you live in the UK or the Republic of Ireland, please call the Samaritans on 116 123.

If you live elsewhere, we recommend finding a local Crisis Centre on the IASP website.

We also highly recommend that you visit the Connecting with People: Staying Safe resource.

Links

Merrall, E. L. C., Bird, S. M. and Hutchinson, S. J. (2013), A record-linkage study of drug-related death and suicide after hospital discharge among drug-treatment clients in Scotland, 1996–2006. Addiction, 108: 377–384. doi: 10.1111/j.1360-0443.2012.04066.x [PubMed abstract]

Delgadillo, J., Godfrey, C., Gilbody, S., and Payne, S (2013) Depression, anxiety and comorbid substance use: association patterns in outpatient addictions treatment.  Mental Health and Substance Use 6(1), 59-75

Ghodse, H., Corkery, J., Claridge, H., Goodair, C., and Schifano, F. Drug-related deaths in the UK.  13th Annual Report.  St Georges Medical School http://www.sgul.ac.uk/media/np-sad2012/np-sad-13th-annual-report-2012finalversionfeb28thmastercopy.pdf

Merrell, E.L.C, Kariminia, A., Binswanger, I., Hobbs, M.S., Farrell, M., Marsden, J., Hutchinson, S.J. and Bird, S.M Meta-analysis of drug-related deaths soon after release from prison Addiction 105(9): 1545–1554

Weaver, T., Madden, P., Charles, V., Stimson, G., Renton, A., Tyrer, P., Barnes, T., Bench, C., Middleton, H., Wright, N., Paterson, S., Shanahan, W., Seivewright, N., Ford, C., (2003) Comorbidity of substance misuse and mental illness in community mental health and substance misuse services. British Journal of Psychiatry, 183, 304-13

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Liz Hughes

Liz Hughes

Liz is a mental health nurse by clinical background, and is Professor of Applied Mental Health Research at the University of Huddersfield, which is a joint appointment with South West Yorkshire Mental Health Partnership NHS Foundation Trust. She is also a visiting senior fellow in the Mental Health and Addictions Research Group led by Professor Simon Gilbody at the University of York. Her role is to develop a programme of funded health research (related to multi-morbidities in mental health) as well as build research capacity. Her clinical experience spans acute psychiatric inpatient settings as well as in inpatient and community addictions treatment services in London and the south of England. Her main research (and teaching) interests include dual diagnosis of mental health and substance use; physical and sexual health and relationships in people with serious mental health problems; and workforce development in mental health. Liz has published and presented widely related to her interests and has worked on a range of workforce development products including strategy documents, training resources and E-learning for dual diagnosis for the Department of Health which is cited as a resource to support NICE guidance for Psychosis and Substance Misuse. She is particularly passionate about improving the quality of care that marginalised groups of mental health service users receive, and developing the capabilities of the workforce to address this.

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