# Social, Economic, and health risks among people who use Methamphetamine: Comparing three patterns of opioid Co-Use

**Authors:** Kimberly Page, Mia Rae Kirk, Tristin Garcia, Haley Etchart, Benjamin Chase, Robert W. Harding, Jess Anderson, May McCarthy, Phillip Fiuty, Kathleen Reich, Kelly Mytinger, Olufemi Erinoso, Karla D. Wagner

PMC · DOI: 10.1016/j.abrep.2025.100660 · 2025-12-19

## TL;DR

The study finds that people who use methamphetamine and opioids together face higher social, economic, and health risks compared to other users.

## Contribution

The paper identifies three distinct methamphetamine-opioid use patterns and their associated risk levels.

## Key findings

- Simultaneous methamphetamine-opioid users had the highest rates of homelessness, trauma, and incarceration.
- Healthcare engagement was linked to lower risk of simultaneous drug use.
- Three use patterns were identified: simultaneous (53.1%), sequential (17.7%), and independent (29.2%).

## Abstract

•Over half of participants reported simultaneous methamphetamine-opioid use.•People with simultaneous use had highest rates of homelessness, trauma, and incarceration.•Healthcare engagement associated with lower risk of simultaneous drug use.

Over half of participants reported simultaneous methamphetamine-opioid use.

People with simultaneous use had highest rates of homelessness, trauma, and incarceration.

Healthcare engagement associated with lower risk of simultaneous drug use.

To examine how persons using different methamphetamine-opioid combinations differ with respect to social, risk, and health characteristics, and to identify patterns of vulnerability across simultaneous, sequential, and independent use.

414 people who use illicit drugs were surveyed, 384 of whom reported polydrug use involving methamphetamine, in Nevada and New Mexico between June 2022 and August 2023. Participants were classified into three mutually exclusive groups based on self-reported methamphetamine and opioid use patterns: simultaneous use (deliberately using both drugs together), sequential use (using both drugs but not deliberately using simultaneously), and independent use (using methamphetamine alone or with non-opioid drugs). Prevalence ratios were calculated to examine associations between use patterns and social, economic, health, and drug use characteristics.

We identified three distinct use patterns: simultaneous (53.1%), sequential (17.7%), and independent (29.2%). Individuals in these risk groups exhibited differential social, economic, carceral, and health-related risk: those engaged in simultaneous showed higher vulnerability relative to people who use independently and sequentially. Healthcare engagement was associated with lower simultaneous use.

These findings suggest the need to support development of strategies to support transition from higher to lower-risk drug use patterns.

## Linked entities

- **Chemicals:** methamphetamine (PubChem CID 1206), opioids (PubChem CID 126961754)

## Full-text entities

- **Chemicals:** opioid Co (-), Methamphetamine (MESH:D008694)

## Figures

2 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12813180/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12813180