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1 ption drug misuse, and over-the-counter drug misuse).
2 rge codes included opioid and/or amphetamine misuse.
3 avoidance strategy which can lead to alcohol misuse.
4  avoidance strategy that can lead to alcohol misuse.
5 re often excessive in size, which encourages misuse.
6 leave unused opioids available for potential misuse.
7 as the most commonly reported motivation for misuse.
8 s may be associated with prescription opioid misuse.
9 r relatives for their most recent episode of misuse.
10 d the first GEWIS examining risk for alcohol misuse.
11 ures, which would help preventing antibiotic misuse.
12 heir importance across dimensions of alcohol misuse.
13 s that target opioid storage, packaging, and misuse.
14 icularly if they are comorbid with substance misuse.
15 ve approach to help screen for possible drug misuse.
16 e of this subthalamic network across alcohol misuse.
17 chronic pain promotes higher rates of opioid misuse.
18 erventions) may improve treatment of alcohol misuse.
19 t score positively on the M-SASQ for alcohol misuse.
20 and oral cancer that can result from alcohol misuse.
21 order, criminality, accidents, and substance misuse.
22 consistently associated with greater alcohol misuse.
23 us diseases, mental disorders, and substance misuse.
24 itiation of substance use and progression to misuse.
25  are effective in the reduction of substance misuse.
26 ng substantial risk of misinterpretation and misuse.
27 l counseling interventions to reduce alcohol misuse.
28  number of misconceptions and their frequent misuse.
29 sistant infections and preventing antibiotic misuse.
30 y its potential for accidental or deliberate misuse.
31 ave an elevated risk of subsequent substance misuse.
32 s of neighborhood social distress and opioid misuse.
33 therapy and to potentially reduce antibiotic misuse.
34  determined for respondents reporting opioid misuse.
35         Citation metrics are widely used and misused.
36 etworks, the MM rate law has frequently been misused.
37 88-4.56]; p<0.001) and no history of alcohol misuse (0.47 [0.24-0.92]; p=0.027).
38 ession or anxiety (0.91, 0.71-1.16), alcohol misuse (0.88, 0.73-1.06), or seeking support for mental
39 ogical distress 1.34, 0.98-1.85), or alcohol misuse (1.32, 0.97-1.80).
40 atient with mental illness, alcohol and drug misuse (19 victims [66%], 27 perpetrators [93%]) and pre
41                            Among adults with misuse, 59.9% reported using opioids without a prescript
42 duce the risk of adverse outcomes, including misuse, abuse, addiction, and overdose, arising from use
43  adverse effects of opioids and the risks of misuse, abuse, and overdose in the nonpatient population
44 ntin (GBP), a prescription drug, is prone to misuse, abuse, withdrawal, and dependence.
45 medication compliance, drug substitution, or misuse/abuse and require follow-up confirmatory testing
46    Previous work has shown patients commonly misuse adrenaline autoinjectors (AAI).
47 na and recreational drugs, prescription drug misuse (adult gender expression only), and consumption o
48         Minimal data exists regarding opioid misuse after endocrine surgical operations.
49 rventions most effective at reducing alcohol misuse after traumatic injury is not known.
50 in those without, particularly in people who misuse alcohol and hard drugs.
51  of IPV and (b) their male partner's alcohol misuse among couples in urban Zambia.
52 ndary care to detect alcohol consumption and misuse among people diagnosed with psoriasis.
53 d call for a proactive step away from colour misuse among the community, publishers, and the press.
54 isuse, and use disorders and motivations for misuse among U.S. adults.
55 sics for clinical pain management, but their misuse and abuse have led to the current opioid epidemic
56  Australia, experiencing epidemics of opioid misuse and abuse over this period.
57 pioids and hence risk of prescription opioid misuse and abuse remains a healthcare concern and a chal
58                   Among PLHIV on COT, opioid misuse and awareness of the addictive potential of COT a
59 rmed diagnosis is a key driver of antibiotic misuse and could inform antimicrobial stewardship interv
60                                       Opioid misuse and deaths are increasing in the United States.
61 tment, and prevention of prescription opioid misuse and dependence.
62 nges in gene expression that lead to alcohol misuse and dependence.
63 accompanying Special Issue on Substance Use, Misuse and Dependence.
64 he further benefit of obviating the risk for misuse and diversion of daily buprenorphine while retain
65  collects and analyzes postmarketing data on misuse and diversion of prescription opioid analgesics a
66           Unused opioids are also subject to misuse and diversion, and they may cause addiction.
67 ation in susceptibility to opioid medication misuse and eventual addiction in the context of chronic
68      Recent trends in methamphetamine (METH) misuse and overdose suggest society is inadvertently ove
69  susceptibility testing (AST) would decrease misuse and overuse of antibiotics.
70              Further interventions to reduce misuse and overuse of antimicrobials in high-consumption
71  antidoping fight is the elimination of drug misuse and prevention of severe adverse effects caused b
72 , there is evidence of widespread continuing misuse and promulgation of poor-quality and insufficient
73 en adults aged 18 years or older for alcohol misuse and provide persons engaged in risky or hazardous
74 ine the feasibility of screening for alcohol misuse and providing brief intervention in a primary den
75  potential contributor to patterns of opioid misuse and related harm.
76 odels shed light on the aetiology of alcohol misuse and suggest targets for prevention.
77  to estimate associations between opioid use/misuse and suicidal behaviors and propensity score-weigh
78 search has shown associations between opioid misuse and suicidal behaviors, but the relationship betw
79 y measure of alcohol consumption and alcohol misuse and to explore the shared genetic basis between t
80 wide Association Study (GWAS) of alcohol use/misuse and two family history (mother DSM-5 AUD and fath
81                                              Misuse and use disorders were most commonly reported in
82  in 2015, with substantial numbers reporting misuse and use disorders.
83 hes toward infectious diseases in people who misuse and/or are addicted to opioids and to concurrentl
84 . opioid crisis primarily target opioid use, misuse, and addiction, but because the opioid crisis inc
85 ch suggests that conduct disorder, substance misuse, and ADHD involve both unique forms of dysfunctio
86 ems such as accidental exposure, intentional misuse, and food and water contamination.
87 jor depression, generalised anxiety, alcohol misuse, and functional impairment.
88 unger age, female sex, unemployment, alcohol misuse, and greater opioid use in the ICU were significa
89         Coordinated mental health, substance misuse, and hepatitis treatment services increased HCV t
90 , frequent binge drinking, prescription drug misuse, and over-the-counter drug misuse).
91 h antisocial personality disorder, substance misuse, and suicide attempts were explained by factors o
92 ence perpetration, mental illness, substance misuse, and suicide ideation or attempt; number and type
93 ures of maternal opioid use, other substance misuse, and treatments or supports received.
94 e the prevalence of prescription opioid use, misuse, and use disorders and motivations for misuse amo
95 n the prevalence of prescription opioid use, misuse, and use disorders are limited.
96                     Prescription opioid use, misuse, and use disorders.
97 tors shared between each disorder, substance misuse, and violence.
98 entions for psychiatric disorders, substance misuse, and violence.
99  (schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, substance misuse, and violent crime) were highly heritable (h(2)=5
100                               Biology can be misused, and the risk of this causing widespread harm in
101  in close proximity; (2) frequent antibiotic misuse; and (3) insufficient drinking water, drainage an
102                                 Much of this misuse appears to be owing to the widespread, mistaken b
103                            Although drugs of misuse appropriate ORs, conflicting reports indicate imm
104  intimate partner violence (IPV) and alcohol misuse are highly prevalent, and partner alcohol misuse
105                       Gallstones and alcohol misuse are long-established risk factors, but several ne
106                         Alcohol and cannabis misuse are related to impaired cognition.
107 n growth, soil degradation, and agrochemical misuse are significant challenges that agriculture must
108                         Due to the potential misuse as a biothreat agent, abrin is in the focus of su
109  a first line treatment for ADHD and is also misused as a purported cognitive enhancer, yet its effec
110 hich may be associated with risk for alcohol misuse, as well as those which may occur as a result of
111 rug misuse high frequency peaked: rare or no misuse at any age, peak at age 18 years, peak at ages 19
112 or generalised anxiety disorder, and alcohol misuse at follow-up.
113 n for illicit drug use and prescription drug misuse, based in part on evidence of efficacy for unheal
114 evelopmental interval when continued alcohol misuse becomes more deviant.
115 utic approaches to prevent and treat alcohol misuse by understanding the molecular mechanisms of alco
116  the same mechanism is used by symbionts and misused by parasites to evade innate immune responses of
117 ow some specific toxicological data has been misused by those aiming to disingenuously influence publ
118 ale, and the secondary outcome, male alcohol misuse, by the Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test
119 e to externalizing disorders such as alcohol misuse calls urgently for effective prevention and inter
120 ssing past-year frequency use for 8 commonly misused categories of substances appears to be a valid m
121                                    Substance misuse contributed most to the increased risk of BBV: af
122 unities come with privacy concerns, and data misuse could potentially lead to privacy infringement fo
123 y intervention programs for drug and alcohol misuse could substantially decrease the greatly elevated
124     In people with a prior history of opioid misuse, cues associated with previous drug intake can tr
125    Despite the continuing epidemic of opioid misuse, data on the prevalence of prescription opioid us
126 reatment for alcohol, cannabis, or hard drug misuse), date of death, primary cause of death, and educ
127 cipants; 1.84, 1.41-2.39, p<0.0001), alcohol misuse disorder (eight studies, 5040 participants; 1.44,
128 of both behaviours who also have a substance misuse disorder are at particularly high risk of dying f
129 ng disorders, personality disorders, alcohol misuse disorder, and substance misuse disorder.
130 ders, alcohol misuse disorder, and substance misuse disorder.
131 pants; 1.90, 1.39-2.61, p<0.0001), substance misuse disorders (11 studies, 5469 participants; 1.84, 1
132 reatment exist-comes from studies of alcohol misuse disorders or non-alcohol-related Wernicke-Korsako
133                                    Substance misuse disorders, particularly multiple drug use, was mo
134 disease especially in the absence of alcohol misuse disorders.
135 smucosal formulations can be associated with misuse, diversion, and nonadherence; these limitations m
136 potential association with subsequent opioid misuse, diversion, and the development of opioid use dis
137  a health-care setting also mitigates abuse, misuse, diversion, and unintentional exposure.
138 those which may occur as a result of alcohol misuse during adolescence and emerging adulthood.
139                        The ongoing substance misuse epidemic in the United States is complex and dyna
140  but their addictive potential has sparked a misuse epidemic.
141 imary cause of this resistance is antibiotic misuse, especially routine inappropriate use of antibiot
142 h low socioeconomic status, drug and alcohol misuse, ethnic origin, and sex.
143  influences that were unrelated to substance misuse explained approximately a fifth (21%; 20-22%) of
144 ounger and had a higher incidence of alcohol misuse, fewer comorbidities, lower severity of illness,
145  improvement efforts suggest that antibiotic misuse for surgical disease is common.
146 s of a mental health condition and substance misuse for the respondent in 40% and 47% of cases, respe
147 cioeconomic status, education, and substance misuse) for BBV infection.
148 ty and the microbiome in relation to alcohol misuse- from binge drinking to addiction.
149 ounterfactual scenario in which persons with misuse had instead not misused opioids.
150                          Prescription opioid misuse has become a leading cause of unintentional injur
151 ature suggest that toxicities may result and misuse has been underestimated, yet little information i
152  The current epidemic of prescription opioid misuse has increased scrutiny of postoperative opioid pr
153  with opioid misuse, similar persons without misuse have a reduced risk of suicidal behaviors.
154                        The rates of cannabis misuse have been increasing.
155                   AUD and aspects of alcohol misuse have been shown to overlap strongly with psychiat
156 was the age when past-year prescription drug misuse high frequency peaked: rare or no misuse at any a
157  for basic needs, combat experience, alcohol misuse, history of violence and arrests, and anger assoc
158 atient treatment for alcohol intoxication or misuse (HR = 1.98, 95% CI 1.76-2.21, p < 0.001).
159 lts suggest that chronic and current alcohol misuse in critically ill patients is associated with kid
160 ion to the loss of tax revenue, with alcohol misuse in England and Wales costing pound21 billion a ye
161 cesses linking avoidance tendency to alcohol misuse in punishment-sensitive drinkers.
162 rticle discusses the scope of the antibiotic misuse in surgery for surgical patients, and provides im
163 and reinforce the need to consider substance misuse in the context of ADHD in clinical interventions.
164  have been found to reduce substance use and misuse in those with elevated personality profiles.
165 nd hypothesis testing methods are frequently misused in clinical research.
166 eceived only limited attention and have been misused in many instances.
167 rdose deaths (largely attributable to opioid misuse) in the United States have grown exponentially fo
168 te to their (intended) benefit in preventing misuse, in these 11 European countries.
169                                      Alcohol misuse is a major public health problem originating from
170 se are highly prevalent, and partner alcohol misuse is a significant contributor to women's risk for
171 us, and any high-frequency prescription drug misuse is a strong risk factor for development of substa
172                          Prescription opioid misuse is an ongoing crisis and a risk factor for inject
173           These findings suggest that opioid misuse is associated with greater odds of suicidal behav
174                                       Opioid misuse is at historically high levels in the United Stat
175                 Reported prescription opioid misuse is common among adolescents and young adults and
176                           Antibiotic use and misuse is driving drug resistance.
177                     Inhalant (e.g., toluene) misuse is linked to behavioral and cognitive deficits in
178                            Prescription drug misuse is most prevalent during young adulthood (ages 18
179 f suicidal behaviors, but opioid use without misuse is not.
180                                      Alcohol misuse is the leading cause of cirrhosis and the second
181 rate identification of patients with alcohol misuse may allow for the prevention of acute kidney inju
182                       Propensity for alcohol misuse may be linked to an individuals' response to alco
183 id monitoring, and associated Current Opioid Misuse Measure (COMM) scores of PLHIV on COT.
184  diseases (men: 0.9; women: 1.4) and alcohol misuse (men: 2.8; women: 1.2).
185 nia) and one psychosocial outcome (substance misuse) met high quality standards.
186 , cognitive training intervention for opioid misuse, Mindfulness-Oriented Recovery Enhancement (MORE)
187 mprehensive account of the causes of alcohol misuse must accommodate individual differences in biolog
188                                  As commonly misused, null-hypothesis significance testing combines t
189                    Accidental or intentional misuse of acetaminophen (APAP) is the leading cause of a
190              From 2004 to 2013, underuse and misuse of AET have decreased for patients with breast ca
191 d with long-term, daily clinical use or even misuse of amphetamine.
192  on developing rapid AST techniques to avoid misuse of antibiotics and provide effective treatment.
193 ading threat to global health because of the misuse of antibiotics and the rise in drug-resistant pat
194                              The overuse and misuse of antibiotics has been identified as a significa
195                                          The misuse of antibiotics in health care and agriculture has
196 first century lifestyle practices, including misuse of antibiotics, dietary changes, and higher rates
197 athogenic bacteria, made worse by widespread misuse of antibiotics.
198 has been attributed to long-term, widespread misuse of antimonial drugs within the Indian private hea
199  threat and is often linked with overuse and misuse of clinical and veterinary chemotherapeutic agent
200 ntific community to identify and prevent the misuse of colour in science, and call for a proactive st
201 anium is necessary to minimize the potential misuse of highly enriched uranium in the world for nonpe
202 ine has the additional risk of diversion and misuse of medication.
203 re is work to be done to avoid the potential misuse of metrics like the JIF.
204 on with behavioral disinhibition and the use/misuse of nicotine, alcohol, and illicit drugs.
205 hosphate-stressed environments, reducing the misuse of nonrenewable fertilizers and their consequent
206 matically increased, including incidences of misuse of opioid drugs prescribed for pain control.
207     Control measures designed to prevent the misuse of opioid medicines can often unintentionally res
208 , which, in turn, will hopefully help lessen misuse of opioid pain medications and address the ongoin
209 lth interventions should focus on preventing misuse of opioids.
210                                  The use and misuse of P values has generated extensive debates.
211                                              Misuse of prescription and illegal opioids (e.g., morphi
212                                    Moreover, misuse of prescription and illicit narcotics has resulte
213                            The diversion and misuse of prescription opioids along with increased use
214                                              Misuse of prescription opioids is a leading cause of pre
215 demonstrate critical issues arising from the misuse of principal component regression that result in
216 though futile treatment is acknowledged as a misuse of resources by many, no study has evaluated its
217 nsmission of infectious agents caused by the misuse of respiratory precautions.
218                                     Although misuse of social networking sites, particularly Twitter,
219 lways utilise consistent terminology and the misuse of some expressions in epidemiology is rife.
220 tractive non-invasive alternative to control misuse of such antibiotic and to ensure food safety by p
221 gens, and thus protect against the potential misuse of synthetic biology.
222 ed with AR determination to avoid overuse or misuse of the antibiotic.
223  an adequate analytical method to detect the misuse of the CRISPR/Cas system by athletes.
224 umerous studies in the past have illustrated misuse of the FOBT.
225   Anecdotal reports have surfaced concerning misuse of the HIV antiretroviral medication efavirenz ((
226 earch is needed to characterize the use (and misuse) of DTS.
227 with prescription opioid use, 12.5% reported misuse; of these, 16.7% reported a prescription opioid u
228 results characterize the effects of ketamine misuse on brain structure and function and highlight the
229                      But regression is often misused on such data, ignoring statistical issues relate
230 core-weighted analyses, compared with opioid misuse, opioid use without misuse was associated with lo
231 in which persons with misuse had instead not misused opioids.
232                                  Among those misusing opioids, 55.7% obtained them from friends or re
233 f life, functional outcomes, adverse events, misuse or diversion, and risk assessment or mitigation.
234                                   Instead of misused or misinterpreted E-values, the authors recommen
235 n increased risk of any subsequent substance misuse outcomes (adjusted hazard ratio [aHR], 3.11; 95%
236 , which attenuated the risk of any substance misuse outcomes (aHR, 2.00; 95% CI, 1.82-2.19).
237                    The risk of any substance misuse outcomes in individuals with TS/CTD was substanti
238                                    Substance misuse outcomes were defined as an ICD code of substance
239 etween ICD diagnoses of TS/CTD and substance misuse outcomes, accounting for psychiatric comorbidity
240 d with various types of subsequent substance misuse outcomes, independently of psychiatric comorbidit
241 at heightened risk for long-term opioid use, misuse, overdose, and death.
242 However, there is growing concerns about PPI misuse, overuse and abuse.
243  identify predictors of adolescent substance misuse, particularly if it can incorporate a wide range
244 lity (e.g., marijuana, alcohol, and caffeine misuse, perceived stress, and impulsive behavior).
245 ng for the discovery that adapted herbivores misuse plant secondary metabolites for multiple purposes
246 nto account that greater than half of youths misusing prescription opioids obtain these medications t
247 valence of additional drug abuse among those misusing prescription opioids.
248 ntal disorders, and programmes for substance misuse prevention and treatment.
249 0.91, 95% CI 0.40-2.05; p=0.82) or substance misuse problems (0.55, 0.27-1.17; p=0.12).
250 ly problems, and mental health and substance misuse problems.
251 istress, multiple physical symptoms, alcohol misuse, problems at home during and after deployment, an
252 ate substitution treatments reduce substance misuse relapse and possibly reoffending.
253                            Those with opioid misuse reported high prevalence of prior cocaine (35.5%)
254  in decreasing prescription opioid abuse and misuse, research focusing on the development and evaluat
255 nts, we derived separate dimensional alcohol misuse scales and applied a proxy-phenotype study design
256 on of illicit drug use and prescription drug misuse screening and brief intervention.
257                                      Alcohol misuse screening and treatment was feasible in a primary
258            Compared with persons with opioid misuse, similar persons without misuse have a reduced ri
259 ar prevalence of prescription opioid use and misuse, sources of prescription opioids, and additional
260          Cocaine is one of the most commonly misused stimulant which could influence the central nerv
261             Exclusions included alcohol/drug misuse, suicidal plan or recent attempt, bipolar disorde
262 nding, 3.62; 95% CI, 3.41-3.84) and cannabis misuse (suicide attempt, 3.57; 95% CI, 3.25-3.92; violen
263 gh shares of excess mortality due to alcohol misuse, suicide, and accidents.
264 EHV1 infection of T lymphocytes and how EHV1 misuses T lymphocytes as a vehicle to reach the endothel
265 els of current and future adolescent alcohol misuse that incorporate brain structure and function, in
266 nt to know what would happen if a researcher misused their health information; fewer (51%, CI: 47%-55
267  who are prescribed opioids for chronic pain misuse them, and 5 to 10% develop an opioid use disorder
268 ed prescription opioids; 11.5 million (4.7%) misused them; and 1.9 million (0.8%) had a use disorder.
269 underlying individual differences in alcohol misuse, these models shed light on the aetiology of alco
270 ributions of human and veterinary antibiotic misuse to this crisis are well-recognized, environmental
271 determinants of health (SDHs, including drug misuse, tobacco smoking and alcohol), and TB, taking int
272 rculosis in England, including through drugs misuse, tobacco smoking, and homelessness.
273                            Prescription drug misuse trajectories are heterogeneous, and any high-freq
274       We aimed to identify prescription drug misuse trajectories for three drug classes (opioids, sti
275                            Prescription drug misuse trajectories were all associated with significant
276                       Five prescription drug misuse trajectories were identified and the defining cha
277                    Similar prescription drug misuse trajectories were identified for each prescriptio
278 ood, especially later-peak prescription drug misuse trajectories.
279  associated with high-risk prescription drug misuse trajectories.
280                               The later peak misuse trajectory for sedatives and tranquilisers creste
281  the high-risk latest peak prescription drug misuse trajectory included high school heavy drinking, c
282                    Prevalence of opioid use, misuse, use disorder, and additional substance use were
283 pared with opioid misuse, opioid use without misuse was associated with lower odds of suicidal ideati
284  95% CI 3.9%-26.3%), while alcohol/substance misuse was commonly reported by adults (12.9%, 95% CI 9.
285 rder (PTSD), depression, anxiety, or alcohol misuse was effective.
286                                       Opioid misuse was reported by 1,050 adolescents (3.8%; 95% CI 3
287                                      Alcohol misuse was the highest risk factor for DALYs (7.0% overa
288    The most commonly reported motivation for misuse was to relieve physical pain (63.4%).
289 he COMM score, a measure of potential opioid misuse, was high.
290 some other health outcomes including alcohol misuse, well-being, change in haemoglobin A1c (HbA1c), a
291 some other health outcomes including alcohol misuse, well-being, change in HbA1c, and smoking cessati
292  behaviour, anxiety disorders, and substance misuse were identified in 19% (1%-36%) and 11% (7%-16%)
293 nia) and one psychosocial outcome (substance misuse) were of a high quality.
294 oking, marijuana use, poly-prescription drug misuse, white race, and not completing a 4-year universi
295 lated past-year prevalence of opioid use and misuse with or without use disorder, sources of prescrip
296   We assessed associations of opioid use and misuse with suicidal ideation, suicide plans, and suicid
297 rne viruses (including risks related to drug misuse) with people who have serious mental illness, as
298 sing opioids were more likely to have opioid misuse without use disorder compared with females (23.2%
299              Targeting of comorbid substance misuse would have particular effect on reduction of BBV
300 enetic engineering attribution', would deter misuse, yet is still considered unsolved.

 
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