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Familial factors influencing the consumption of anxiolytics and hypnotics by children and adolescents
12
Citations
13
References
2001
Year
Lifetime Medication UseSubstance UsePsychotropic MedicationPsychopharmacologyEducationChild Mental HealthPsychologySocial SciencesAdolescent MedicinePsychoactive Substance UseMedication UseChild PsychologyPsychiatryBenzodiazepine ConsumptionFamilial FactorsAdolescent DevelopmentAlcohol DependenceSubstance AbuseAddictionPediatricsSubstance AddictionChild PsychiatryPsychopathology
Many hypotheses have been made to explain the high rate of benzodiazepine consumption in France, including a general cultural and/or familial tendency to use certain types of psychotropic drugs. This study explored the association between lifetime medication use by parents and their children. Two hundred and twenty-one young patients (158 boys and 63 girls) consulting at a child and adolescent psychiatry department, six to 16 years of age (mean = 9.7 years), were screened for lifetime use of psychotropic drugs using a structured interview. Parents were asked about their own consumption, as well as their children's. Lifetime consumption rates (at least once) were 22.2% in boys and 20.6% in girls, and 19.6% in children less than 11 years old. Higher rates were found in patients with emotional disorders (anxiety disorders and depression). In parents, 45.1% of mothers and 24.1% of fathers reported using medications at least once. A significant association was found between child and parental medication use: 34.1% of children had positive lifetime consumption when their mothers also used medications at least once versus only 13.6% in other children (odds ratio = 3.31 [1.68-6.50]; P = 0.001). The most significant association was found between medication use by girls and their mothers (odds ratio = 12.1 [2.38-61.5]; P = 0.003). These data point to the existence of a family pattern of psychotropic drug consumption, especially in females.
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