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Dive into the research topics where Hilary L. Surratt is active.

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Featured researches published by Hilary L. Surratt.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2015

Trends in Opioid Analgesic Abuse and Mortality in the United States

Richard C. Dart; Hilary L. Surratt; Theodore J. Cicero; Mark W. Parrino; S. Geoff Severtson; Becki Bucher-Bartelson; Jody L. Green

BACKGROUND The use of prescription opioid medications has increased greatly in the United States during the past two decades; in 2010, there were 16,651 opioid-related deaths. In response, hundreds of federal, state, and local interventions have been implemented. We describe trends in the diversion and abuse of prescription opioid analgesics using data through 2013. METHODS We used five programs from the Researched Abuse, Diversion, and Addiction-Related Surveillance (RADARS) System to describe trends between 2002 and 2013 in the diversion and abuse of all products and formulations of six prescription opioid analgesics: oxycodone, hydrocodone, hydromorphone, fentanyl, morphine, and tramadol. The programs gather data from drug-diversion investigators, poison centers, substance-abuse treatment centers, and college students. RESULTS Prescriptions for opioid analgesics increased substantially from 2002 through 2010 in the United States but then decreased slightly from 2011 through 2013. In general, RADARS System programs reported large increases in the rates of opioid diversion and abuse from 2002 to 2010, but then the rates flattened or decreased from 2011 through 2013. The rate of opioid-related deaths rose and fell in a similar pattern. Reported nonmedical use did not change significantly among college students. CONCLUSIONS Postmarketing surveillance indicates that the diversion and abuse of prescription opioid medications increased between 2002 and 2010 and plateaued or decreased between 2011 and 2013. These findings suggest that the United States may be making progress in controlling the abuse of opioid analgesics. (Funded by the Denver Health and Hospital Authority.).


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2012

Effect of abuse-deterrent formulation of OxyContin.

Theodore J. Cicero; Matthew S. Ellis; Hilary L. Surratt

In 2010, an abuse-deterrent formulation of the widely abused prescription opioid OxyContin replaced the original formulation. After the new formulation was introduced, patients reported that they used OxyContin less often and other drugs (including heroin) more often.


Journal of Health Care for the Poor and Underserved | 2005

Barriers to Health and Social Services for Street-Based Sex Workers

Steven P. Kurtz; Hilary L. Surratt; Marion C. Kiley; James A. Inciardi

Homelessness, poverty, drug abuse and violent victimization faced by street-based women sex workers create needs for a variety of health and social services, yet simultaneously serve as barriers to accessing these very services. The present study utilized interview (n = 586) and focus group (n = 25) data to examine the service needs and associated barriers to access among women sex workers in Miami, Florida. Women most often reported acute service needs for shelter, fresh water, transportation, crisis intervention, and drug detoxification, as well as long-term needs for mental and physical health care, drug treatment, and legal and employment services. Barriers included both structural (e.g., program target population, travel costs, office hours, and social stigma) and individual (e.g., drug use, mental stability, and fear) factors. Bridging these gaps is tremendously important from a public health perspective given the disease burden among this population. Recommendations include service staff training, outreach, and promising research directions.


Crime & Delinquency | 2004

Sex Work and Drug Use in a Subculture of Violence

Hilary L. Surratt; James A. Inciardi; Steven P. Kurtz; Marion C. Kiley

This article examines the subculture of violence thesis as it relates to female street sex workers in Miami. Interview and focus group methods were used to study the intersections of childhood trauma, drug use, and violent victimization among 325 women. Using targeted sampling, crack- and heroin-using sex workers were recruited through street outreach into an HIV-prevention research program. Interviews used standard instrumentation and focused on drug-related and sexual risk for HIV, sex work, violence, childhood trauma, and health status. Nearly half of the respondents reported physical (44.9%) and/ or sexual (50.5%) abuse as children, and over 40% experienced violence from clients in the prior year: 24.9% were beaten, 12.9% were raped, and 13.8% were threatened with weapons. Consistent relationships between historical and current victimization suggest that female sex workers experience a continuing cycle of violence throughout their lives. The policy and research implications of these findings are discussed.


The Prison Journal | 1995

Sex in Prison: Exploring the Myths and Realities

Christine A. Saum; Hilary L. Surratt; James A. Inciardi; Rachael E. Bennett

Prison narratives, mass media, and conclusions drawn from institutional research have fostered a perception of widespread “homosexual rape” in male penitentiaries. However, studies of sexual contact in prison have shown inmate involvement to vary greatly. To explore the nature and frequency of sexual contact between male inmates in a Delaware prison, the authors administered a survey of sexual behavior. Respondents were questioned extensively about sexual activities that they engaged in, directly observed, and heard about “through the grapevine” prior to their entry into a prison treatment program. Findings indicate that (a) although sexual contact is not wide-spread, it nevertheless occurs; (b) the preponderance of the activity is consensual rather than rape; and (c) inmates themselves perceive the myth of pervasive sex in prison, contradicting their own realities.


Pain | 2008

Co-morbid pain and psychopathology in males and females admitted to treatment for opioid analgesic abuse.

Theodore J. Cicero; Michael T. Lynskey; Alexandre A. Todorov; James A. Inciardi; Hilary L. Surratt

Abstract The purpose of this study was to identify co‐morbidity in a national sample (N = 1408) of males and females entering treatment for opioid abuse. Our sample was primarily white, lived in small urban, suburban or rural locations (80%), and was well‐educated. Chronic pain was a symptomatic feature in over 60% of all subjects. Furthermore, 79% of male and 85% of female prescription opioid abusers indicated that their first exposure to an opioid was a legitimate prescription for pain which subsequently led 60–70% to misuse to get high. Our data also indicate that the use of prescription opioids to get high represents the end stage on a continuum of substance abuse, beginning at a very early age. The age of first alcohol use, getting drunk, smoking, use of marijuana, stimulants and other non‐opioid prescription or illicit drugs occurred very early (13–19) in prescription opioid misusers/abusers, whose first use of opioids did not occur, on average, until age 22. Finally, most of the sample had sought treatment 3 or more times for substance abuse prior to the treatment admission in which the survey was completed. Physical and mental health were very poor in both male and female prescription opioid abusers, but females were more ill and dysfunctional than males in all physical and particularly emotional domains. Our results suggest that a small number of “at risk” opioid naive pain patients, who might abuse their therapeutically appropriate opioid analgesics, can be identified by assessing pre‐ and co‐morbid substance abuse and significant psychopathology.


Violence Against Women | 2004

Sex Work and “Date” Violence

Steven P. Kurtz; Hilary L. Surratt; James A. Inciardi; Marion C. Kiley

This study employed survey and focus group methods to examine the characteristics and sex work-related behaviors of 294 female street-based sex workers in Miami that make them more likely to be victimized by their clients or “dates.” More than half the respondents had experienced date violence in the prior year. Economic desperation, using crack or heroin while working, not controlling the date location, and having sex in the car were strong predictors of victimization. The article concludes with recommendations for a harm-reduction approach to outreach and education, and it calls for increased legal protections for victimized sex workers.


Journal of Addictive Diseases | 2009

The “Black Box” of Prescription Drug Diversion

James A. Inciardi; Hilary L. Surratt; Theodore J. Cicero; Steven P. Kurtz; Steven S. Martin; Mark W. Parrino

ABSTRACT A variety of surveys and studies are examined in an effort to better understand the scope of prescription drug diversion and to determine whether there are consistent patterns of diversion among various populations of prescription drug abusers. Data are drawn from the RADARS System, the National Survey of Drug Use and Health, the Delaware School Survey, and a series of quantitative and qualitative studies conducted in Miami, Florida. The data suggest that the major sources of diversion include drug dealers, friends and relatives, smugglers, pain patients, and the elderly, but these vary by the population being targeted. In all of the studies examined, the use of the Internet as a source for prescription drugs is insignificant. Little is known about where drug dealers are obtaining their supplies, and as such, prescription drug diversion is a “black box” requiring concentrated, systematic study.


The Journal of Pain | 2013

Reduced Abuse, Therapeutic Errors, and Diversion Following Reformulation of Extended-Release Oxycodone in 2010

Stevan G. Severtson; Becki Bucher Bartelson; Jonathan M. Davis; Alvaro Muñoz; Michael F. Schneider; Howard Chilcoat; Paul Coplan; Hilary L. Surratt; Richard C. Dart

UNLABELLED This study evaluated changes in abuse exposures, therapeutic error exposures, and diversion into illegal markets associated with brand extended-release oxycodone (ERO) following introduction of reformulated ERO. Original ERO and reformulated ERO street prices also were compared. Data from the Poison Center and Drug Diversion programs of the Researched Abuse, Diversion and Addiction-Related Surveillance (RADARS) System were used. Quarterly rates 2 years prior to introduction of reformulated ERO (October 2008 through September 2010) were compared to quarterly rates after introduction (October 2010 through March 2012) using negative binomial regression. Street prices were compared using a mixed effects linear regression model. Following reformulated ERO introduction, poison center ERO abuse exposures declined 38% (95% confidence interval [CI]: 31-45) per population and 32% (95% CI: 24-39) per unique recipients of dispensed drug. Therapeutic error exposures declined 24% (95% CI: 15-31) per population and 15% (95% CI: 6-24) per unique recipients of dispensed drug. Diversion reports declined 53% (95% CI: 41-63) per population and 50% (95% CI: 39-59) per unique recipients of dispensed drug. Declines exceeded those observed for other prescription opioids in aggregate. After its introduction, the street price of reformulated ERO was significantly lower than original ERO. PERSPECTIVE This article indicates that the abuse, therapeutic errors, and diversion of ERO declined following the introduction of a tamper-resistant reformulation of the product. Reformulating abused prescription opioids to include tamper-resistant properties may be an effective approach to reduce abuse of such products.


Journal of Psychoactive Drugs | 2001

Drug use, street crime, and sex-trading among cocaine-dependent women: implications for public health and criminal justice policy.

James A. Inciardi; Hilary L. Surratt

Abstract The linkages between the sex-for-crack exchanges, prostitution, and rising rates of HIV and other sexually transmitted diseases among cocaine-dependent women have been well documented. As crack began to disappear from the headlines during the 1990s, however, it was assumed by many that crack had fallen on hard times in the street drug culture. Within this context, this article examines the extent to which crack has remained primary in the culture of cocaine-dependent women. Data are drawn from a study of 708 cocaine-dependent women in Miami, Florida, during the years 1994 to 1996, and qualitative data gathered during 1998 and 1999 in the same field areas. Analyses focus on drug use, criminality and HIV/AIDS risk behaviors. Implications for policy alternatives in criminal justice and public health approaches for assisting this population are discussed.

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Steven P. Kurtz

Nova Southeastern University

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Theodore J. Cicero

Washington University in St. Louis

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Mance E. Buttram

Nova Southeastern University

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Maria A. Levi-Minzi

Nova Southeastern University

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Flavio Pechansky

Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul

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Catherine L. O'Grady

Nova Southeastern University

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