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Emergencies related to recreational drug abuse in Spain compared to emergencies attended in 3 European areas

Publicated to:Emergencias: Revista De La Sociedad Española De Medicina De Urgencias Y Emergencias. 30 (6): 385-394 - 2018-01-01 30(6), DOI:

Authors: Miró Ò; Yates C; Dines AM; Wood DM; Dargan PI; Galán I; Jerez A; Puiguriguer J; Waring WS; Moughty A; O’connor N; Heyerdahl F; Hovda KE; Vallersnes OM; Paasma R; Põld K; Jürgens G; Megarbane B; Anand JS; Liakoni E; Liechti M; Eyer F; Zacharov S; Caganova B; Giraudon I; Galicia M

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Abstract

© 2018, Saned. All rights reserved. Objectives. To analyze epidemiologic, clinical, and care characteristics in cases in which patients came to 2 Spanish emergency departments (EDs) with symptoms caused by recreational drug abuse. To compare the characteristics with those reported for other areas of Europe. Methods. Secondary analysis of the registry of the European Drug Emergencies Network (Euro-DEN Plus), which collects cases in 14 European countries and 20 EDs. The registry included all patients attending EDs with symptoms of recreational drug abuse (excepting cases involving alcohol alone) over a period of 39 consecutive months (October 2013 to December 2016). We compared the cases from the 2 Spanish EDs (in Barcelona and Palma de Mallorca) to those from the 5 EDs in Ireland and the UK, 6 in northern Europe, and 7 in central Europe. Results. A total of 17 104 patients’ cases were included: Spain, 1186; UK and Ireland, 6653; northern Europe, 6097; and central Europe, 3168. Spain saw more emergencies related to cocaine (48.4%) and fewer related to opioids (12.4%) than the other areas. The Spanish patients were younger (32.2 years) on average than those in northern Europe and older than those in the UK and Ireland and central Europe. Fewer patients were women in Spain (21.9%) than in northern or central Europe. Fewer arrived in ambulances in Spain (70.0%) than in the UK and Ireland or northern Europe. The Spanish EDs recorded the temperature and respiratory frequency of fewer patients (29.8% and 30.3%, respectively). Clinical signs differed between geographical areas attributable to differences in drug-use patterns. In Spain, naloxone was used by fewer patients (9.6%) than in the UK and Ireland and northern Europe, and flumazenil was used by more patients (5.6%) than in other areas. Spain saw lower percentages of admissions (4.6%) and patients who left without an ED discharge (6.2%) in comparison with other areas. Mortality rates in the Spanish EDs (0.4%) and after discharge from them (0.7%) were higher than in northern Europe. Conclusions. The characteristics of emergencies related to recreational drug abuse registered by the Spanish EDs were differed from those registered in other parts of Europe due to different patterns of drug use. We also detected differences between the Spanish and other European EDs with respect to examinations or tests performed, treatment given, and discharge disposition.

Keywords

Clinical courseDrogasEmergency departmentEpidemiologiaEpidemiologyEvoluciónSíntomasStreet drugsSymptomsUrgencias

Quality index

Bibliometric impact. Analysis of the contribution and dissemination channel

The work has been published in the journal Emergencias: Revista De La Sociedad Española De Medicina De Urgencias Y Emergencias due to its progression and the good impact it has achieved in recent years, according to the agency WoS (JCR), it has become a reference in its field. In the year of publication of the work, 2018, it was in position 4/29, thus managing to position itself as a Q1 (Primer Cuartil), in the category Emergency Medicine.

From a relative perspective, and based on the normalized impact indicator calculated from World Citations provided by WoS (ESI, Clarivate), it yields a value for the citation normalization relative to the expected citation rate of: 1.49. This indicates that, compared to works in the same discipline and in the same year of publication, it ranks as a work cited above average. (source consulted: ESI Nov 14, 2024)

Specifically, and according to different indexing agencies, this work has accumulated citations as of 2025-06-03, the following number of citations:

  • WoS: 21
  • Europe PMC: 1

Leadership analysis of institutional authors

This work has been carried out with international collaboration, specifically with researchers from: Czech Republic; Denmark; Estonia; France; Germany; Norway; Poland; Slovakia; Switzerland; United Kingdom.

There is a significant leadership presence as some of the institution’s authors appear as the first or last signer, detailed as follows: First Author (Miró Andreu, Òscar) and Last Author (Galicia Paredes, Miguel ).