Buprenorphine Treatment for Young Adults

Recent concern has focused on opioid use among youth, particularly non-medical use of pain relievers.

  • In 2007, there were 7,000 new initiates of nonmedical use of opioids daily.
  • Among youth ages 12-17, females are more likely to use opioids nonmedically.
  • Among young adults ages 18-25, males are more likely to use opioids nonmedically.
  • The Monitoring the Future survey showed that nearly 10% of 12th graders reported past year nonmedical use of Vicodin, and 4.7% reported OxyContin use in 2008.

The usual treatment for opioid-addicted youth is short-term detoxification and individual or group therapy in residential or outpatiend settings over weeks or months. Although relapse is high using this approach, within the durg abuse treatment community, clinicians remain reluctant to use medication with opioid-addicted youth and young adults. This Blending product highlights the findings of the NIDA CTN study that compared longer term versus short-term buprenorphine/naloxone treatment in an outpatient setting. Primary results indicated that young adults in the longer term buprenorphine treatment were less likely to inject drugs or abuse opioids, cocaine, and marijuana, and were more likely to remain in treatment than those young adults who received short-term detoxification.


study outcomes table

Articles

For additional resources highlighting research related to buprenorphine treatment for young adults, please see the "Other Resources" section.

For additional resources related to prescription drug abuse, please see the ATTC website, www.fightRXabuse.org.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

ATTC Network Home      Treatment & Help      The ATTC Hub      Contact Us      Site Map      Copyright Information      Join Our Email List
Site Developed by KC Web Programmers