Gesundheitswesen 2021; 83(08/09): 722
DOI: 10.1055/s-0041-1732193
Donnerstag 23.09.2021
Vorträge

Substance use disorder and the baby boom generation: Does Berlin outpatient addiction care face a sustained change?

S Specht
1   IFT Institut für Therapieforschung, München, Deutschland
,
B Braun-Michl
1   IFT Institut für Therapieforschung, München, Deutschland
,
L Schwarzkopf
1   IFT Institut für Therapieforschung, München, Deutschland
,
D Piontek
1   IFT Institut für Therapieforschung, München, Deutschland
,
N-N Seitz
1   IFT Institut für Therapieforschung, München, Deutschland
,
M Wildner
2   Bayerisches Landesamt für Gesundheit und Lebensmittelsicherheit (LGL), Oberschleißheim, Deutschland
3   Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München, Pettenkofer School of Public Health, München
,
L Kraus
1   IFT Institut für Therapieforschung, München, Deutschland
4   Department of Public Health Science, Centre for Social Research on Alcohol and Drugs, Stockholm, Schweden
5   Institute of Psychology, ELTE Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest, Ungarn
› Author Affiliations
 
 

    Purpose The ageing of baby boomers is expected to confront addiction care with new challenges. This cohort had greater exposition to psychoactive substances in youth than earlier cohorts. In this study we aimed to investigate whether Berlin addiction care is confronted with a sustained change in its clientele initiated by the baby boomers.

    Methods Using data from Berlin outpatient addiction care facilities, we contrasted type of primary substance use disorder and number of comorbid substance use disorders in baby boomers with an earlier and a later cohort. To isolate cohort effects, two‐level random intercept regression models were applied in the overlapping age groups of the baby boomer cohort with each of the other cohorts.

    Results Compared with the earlier cohort, alcohol use disorder lost importance whereas illicit substance use disorder gained importance in the baby boomers. Baby boomers presented a higher number of comorbid substance use disorders than the earlier cohort. Comparing baby boomers with the later cohort, these relationships pointed in the opposite direction.

    Conclusions Outpatient addiction care faces a sustained change to more illicit and comorbid substance use disorders. With increasing life expectancy and the ageing of baby boomers marked by higher substance use than previous cohorts, older clients, who had been under‐represented in outpatient addiction care, will gain relevance. Hence, addiction care has to adapt its offers to appropriately meet the changing needs of its clientele.


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    Publication History

    Article published online:
    02 September 2021

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