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Substance abuse in the United States: Findings from recent epidemiologic studies

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Abstract

Recent research on the epidemiology of substance use disorders (SUDs) has provided important insights into these conditions and their impact on public health. In the United States, annual surveys of drug use in household and school populations serve as one of the primary sources of information about the distribution of illicit drug use. This research has demonstrated continued shifts in trends in illicit drug use in the United States and called attention to rising rates of prescription drug misuse and abuse. Findings have also continued to highlight the substantial comorbidity of SUDs with other psychiatric disorders and with the ongoing HIV epidemic. Building on these foundations, future challenges for research in substance abuse epidemiology will include using novel methodologic approaches to further unravel the complex interrelationships that link individual vulnerabilities for SUDs, including genetic factors, with social and environmental risk factors.

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Correspondence to Jeffrey D. Schulden.

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Schulden, J.D., Thomas, Y.F. & Compton, W.M. Substance abuse in the United States: Findings from recent epidemiologic studies. Curr Psychiatry Rep 11, 353–359 (2009). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11920-009-0053-6

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