January 7, 2023
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Results from the 2021 National Survey on Drug Use and Health were released this week. Here are a few of the highlights.

Substance Use Disorder Prevalence

46.3 million people aged 12 or older (or 16.5 percent of the population) met the applicable DSM-5 criteria for having a substance use disorder in the past year, including 29.5 million people who were classified as having an alcohol use disorder and 24 million people who were classified as having a drug use disorder.

SAMHSA Announces National Survey on Drug Use and Health (NSDUH) Results Detailing Mental Illness and Substance Use Levels in 2021. (2023, January 4).

That’s a startling number. One of every six Americans over 12 years old has had a substance use disorder in the past year?

Further:

The percentage of people who were classified as having a past year substance use disorder, including alcohol use and/or drug use disorder, was highest among young adults aged 18 to 25 compared to youth and adults 26 and older.

SAMHSA Announces National Survey on Drug Use and Health (NSDUH) Results Detailing Mental Illness and Substance Use Levels in 2021. (2023, January 4).

So, the prevalence among young adults is worse than 16.5%?!

I found the relevant table and the past year SUD prevalence for Americans 18 to 25 is 18.5% — nearly one out of five. And that’s just past year. It makes one wonder about the lifetime prevalence.

So, what’s going on here?

Well, one factor is the category of SUD itself. It puts the following 2 people in the same category:

So, SUDs include people like Megan, with very mild problems that many people “mature out” of without any treatment or intervention, and people like Mark, with chronic, severe, and debilitating addictions.

I believe that Megan and Mark do NOT represent differing severities of the same problem. They represent two different kinds of problems. Influenza and lung cancer are both disorders involving the respiratory system, but placing them in the same category would only create confusion. (I’ve written about the problems with SUDs as a category here.)

This isn’t to say that we should just shrug our shoulders about people like Megan, but it does help explain those eye-popping numbers.

Another headscratcher is the increase in the NSDUH’s prevalence estimates over the years. In 2014 they estimated that 8.1% of Americans 12 and older met criteria for a Substance Use Disorder (pg 23).

Recovery Prevalence

The finding that’s getting more attention is about the prevalence of recovery.

Before we look at that number, it’s worth considering what we might mean by recovery.

The report indicates that 7 in 10 (72.2 percent or 20.9 million) adults who ever had a substance use problem considered themselves to be recovering or in recovery.

Again, a stunning number. BUT, it’s worth reflecting on the meaning the key terms — “substance use problem” and “recovering/recovery.”

So, how does the study operationalize these terms? Here are the relevant questions from the survey.

Above, we discussed the problems with SUDs as a category. This question lowers the threshold for inclusion even further. Anyone who does not meet criteria for an SUD but thinks they once had a problem would be included. If the SUD diagnostic criteria are based on beliefs about what constitutes clinical significance, this question includes subclinical levels of use.

The question about recovery is also framed in a way that makes it hard to answer any way other than “yes, I am recovering or in recovery” unless the person is in the throes of a substance use problem.

Megan would answer yes. If Mark were to find his way to recovery and successfully rebuild his life with the help of a community of recovery, would it make sense to put him and Megan in the same category? Where might that be helpful? Where might that be misleading? If recovery is understood as an endpoint and Megan is using alcohol in moderation, could considering moderate alcohol use “recovery” constitute at dangerous goal for someone like Mark?

Imagine the questions asked about disorders affecting the respiratory system. Andrew responds “yes”, that he’s had bronchitis before. Angela responds “yes”, that she’s had lung cancer. For the question about recovery, of course Andrew says “yes” that he has recovered. Angela responds “yes”, that she went through chemo and had a lung removed.

Is Andrew likely to think of himself as “in recovery” or “recovering”? Probably not, but the only sensible answer to the question is “yes”. What do they share in common?

Imagine the question was about weight problems. Bill says yes because his BMI once put him in the overweight category and he shed 15 pounds. Robert says yes because he once weighed 450 pounds and has lost 250 pounds. If we put them together because we assume they share a common experience and identity, how is that likely to go?

It’s important to note that this use of the term recovery is considerably different from its cultural, medical, or research use.

Making sense of all this

So… what should we make of all this?

None of this is to suggest that this information is useless. It could be very helpful for understanding patterns of substance use and conceptualizing public health needs and interventions.

However, I’d urge caution about trying to infer much about the prevalence of serious substance problems and the prevalence of what our culture has understood as recovery.

I also wonder about the effects of this federal survey’s drift (a doubling of SUD prevalence over 7 years?) and repetition of its reconceptualization of “recovery.” How does that change cultural, professional, and personal concepts? Where might that be helpful and unhelpful? What discord does that create? When and where is it desirable and undesirable to create discord? When this kind of work stirs discord between communities, professionals, advocates, and researchers, how should that be navigated? Who decides?

I don’t know, but it’s worth discussing.