Benzodiazepine anti-anxiety agents: prevalence and correlates of use in a southern community.
M Swartz,
R Landerman,
L K George,
M L Melville,
D Blazer and
K Smith
Department of Psychiatry, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC 27710.
BACKGROUND: Benzodiazepine anti-anxiety agents are the mostwidely prescribed psychotherapeutic drugs in the United Statestoday. Recent evidence, however, suggests that their use maybe decreasing. METHODS: We examine the population prevalenceand correlates of use of benzodiazepine anxiolytics at the Dukesite of the NIMH-sponsored Epidemiologic Catchment Area project.RESULTS: Bivariate analysis of use patterns for the drugs revealeddemographic predictors similar to those reported in previousstudies: increased likelihood of use by the elderly, Whites,women, the less educated, and the separated or divorced. Useis also associated with symptoms of psychic distress, negativelife events, use of health care services, and diagnoses of affectivedisorder, agoraphobia with panic, and panic disorder. Age, sex,race, education, and marital status remain associated with non-hypnoticbenzodiazepine use in a logistic regression analysis. CONCLUSIONS:Multivariate analyses of these data indicate that when potentialconfounding factors are controlled, age, sex, race, education,and marital status are significantly related to benzodiazepineanxiolytic use but the effects of sex and education are mediatedby intervening variables. Implications of these findings arediscussed particularly in relation to high levels of use inthe elderly.
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