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A qualitative study of benzodiazepine/z-drug and opioid co-use patterns and overdose risk

A qualitative study of benzodiazepine/z-drug and opioid co-use patterns and overdose risk
A qualitative study of benzodiazepine/z-drug and opioid co-use patterns and overdose risk
Background: Co-use of benzodiazepines and/or ‘z-drugs’ along with opioids is linked to the rise in drug related deaths (DRD) in the UK. Understanding patterns of co-use could inform harm reduction strategies for reducing DRDs. This study explored how people co-use, including dosages, timings, methods of administration, use of other substances and desired effects sought. 

Methods :Forty-eight semi-structured interviews across Glasgow in Scotland (n=28), Bristol (n=10) and Teesside (n=10) in England with individuals who co-use illicit and/or prescribed opioids and benzodiazepines/z-drugs were conducted. Eighteen interviews were co-facilitated with qualitatively trained local peer researchers. Interviews were analysed using the Framework method.  

Results: Six co-use patterns were generated: (1) co-use to aid sleep or come down, (2) curated co-use, opioid agonist therapy (OAT) only (3) morning and evening benzodiazepine doses with opioids throughout the day (4) co-use binges (5) co-use throughout the day, (6) benzodiazepine use throughout the day plus OAT. Patterns one to three reflected more controlled co-use with a focus on self-medicating to give confidence, manage anxiety, promote sleep and come-down from cocaine/ketamine. Patterns four to six involved greater poly-drug use, and less controlled co-use with a focus on seeking euphoria (“warm glow”, “gouching out”) or oblivion (to escape untreated mental health conditions and trauma). Patterns two, three, five and six involved daily co-use. People switched between patterns depending on available resources (e.g. finances) or changes to prescriptions (opioids or benzodiazepines). Near-fatal overdoses were reported by participants across all co-use patterns. Patterns four to six were conceptualised as presenting greater overdose risk due to less controlled co-use and more extensive polydrug use.

 Conclusions :The patterns identified provide opportunities for future harm reduction strategies, tailoring advice to patterns of use, updated prescribing guidance and policies, and the need for better access to mental health care, for people who co-use benzodiazepines and opioids to reduce DRDs.
Benzodiazepines, Co-use, Opioids, Overdose, Polydrug use, Qualitative research, z-drugs
1477-7517
Family, Hannah
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Vojt, Gabriele
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Poulter, Hannah L
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Bailey, Chris P
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Sheikh, Ana Paula Abdala
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Cavallo, Damiana
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Karimi, Sara
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Booth, Nick
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Silva, Peter Da
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Aitken, Louise
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Stewart, Samantha
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Hickman, Matthew
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henderson, graeme
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Scott, Jennifer
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Kesten, Joanna
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Family, Hannah
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Vojt, Gabriele
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Poulter, Hannah L
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Bailey, Chris P
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Sheikh, Ana Paula Abdala
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Cavallo, Damiana
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Karimi, Sara
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Booth, Nick
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Silva, Peter Da
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Aitken, Louise
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Stewart, Samantha
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Hickman, Matthew
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henderson, graeme
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Scott, Jennifer
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Kesten, Joanna
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Family, Hannah, Vojt, Gabriele, Poulter, Hannah L, Bailey, Chris P, Sheikh, Ana Paula Abdala, Cavallo, Damiana, Karimi, Sara, Booth, Nick, Silva, Peter Da, Aitken, Louise, Stewart, Samantha, Hickman, Matthew, henderson, graeme, Scott, Jennifer and Kesten, Joanna (2025) A qualitative study of benzodiazepine/z-drug and opioid co-use patterns and overdose risk. Harm Reduction Journal, 22 (1), [24]. (doi:10.1186/s12954-025-01153-8).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: Co-use of benzodiazepines and/or ‘z-drugs’ along with opioids is linked to the rise in drug related deaths (DRD) in the UK. Understanding patterns of co-use could inform harm reduction strategies for reducing DRDs. This study explored how people co-use, including dosages, timings, methods of administration, use of other substances and desired effects sought. 

Methods :Forty-eight semi-structured interviews across Glasgow in Scotland (n=28), Bristol (n=10) and Teesside (n=10) in England with individuals who co-use illicit and/or prescribed opioids and benzodiazepines/z-drugs were conducted. Eighteen interviews were co-facilitated with qualitatively trained local peer researchers. Interviews were analysed using the Framework method.  

Results: Six co-use patterns were generated: (1) co-use to aid sleep or come down, (2) curated co-use, opioid agonist therapy (OAT) only (3) morning and evening benzodiazepine doses with opioids throughout the day (4) co-use binges (5) co-use throughout the day, (6) benzodiazepine use throughout the day plus OAT. Patterns one to three reflected more controlled co-use with a focus on self-medicating to give confidence, manage anxiety, promote sleep and come-down from cocaine/ketamine. Patterns four to six involved greater poly-drug use, and less controlled co-use with a focus on seeking euphoria (“warm glow”, “gouching out”) or oblivion (to escape untreated mental health conditions and trauma). Patterns two, three, five and six involved daily co-use. People switched between patterns depending on available resources (e.g. finances) or changes to prescriptions (opioids or benzodiazepines). Near-fatal overdoses were reported by participants across all co-use patterns. Patterns four to six were conceptualised as presenting greater overdose risk due to less controlled co-use and more extensive polydrug use.

 Conclusions :The patterns identified provide opportunities for future harm reduction strategies, tailoring advice to patterns of use, updated prescribing guidance and policies, and the need for better access to mental health care, for people who co-use benzodiazepines and opioids to reduce DRDs.

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Accepted/In Press date: 3 January 2025
Published date: 27 February 2025
Additional Information: Publisher Copyright: © The Author(s) 2025.
Keywords: Benzodiazepines, Co-use, Opioids, Overdose, Polydrug use, Qualitative research, z-drugs

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 502095
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/502095
ISSN: 1477-7517
PURE UUID: d05d08f2-8661-45bb-ac36-706860eeef94
ORCID for Gabriele Vojt: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-9135-0684

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Date deposited: 16 Jun 2025 16:52
Last modified: 22 Aug 2025 02:49

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Contributors

Author: Hannah Family
Author: Gabriele Vojt ORCID iD
Author: Hannah L Poulter
Author: Chris P Bailey
Author: Ana Paula Abdala Sheikh
Author: Damiana Cavallo
Author: Sara Karimi
Author: Nick Booth
Author: Peter Da Silva
Author: Louise Aitken
Author: Samantha Stewart
Author: Matthew Hickman
Author: graeme henderson
Author: Jennifer Scott
Author: Joanna Kesten

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