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  3. Relationship between benzodiazepine prescription, aggressive behavior, and behavioral disinhibition: a retrospective study in a Swiss prison.
 

Relationship between benzodiazepine prescription, aggressive behavior, and behavioral disinhibition: a retrospective study in a Swiss prison.

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BORIS DOI
10.48350/159481
Publisher DOI
10.1186/s12954-021-00504-5
PubMed ID
34016128
Description
BACKGROUND

Benzodiazepines are commonly prescribed in prisons amidst the controversies surrounding their potential role in causing behavioral disinhibition and aggressive behavior and their association with use and trafficking of illicit and addictive substances. The present study aimed to (1) ascertain the relationship between benzodiazepine prescription (including their dosage and duration of use) and aggressive behavior and behavioral disinhibition in prison and (2) investigate whether there was an association between benzodiazepine prescription, (including their dosage and duration of use) and using and trafficking illicit and addictive substances during imprisonment.

METHODS

Data were extracted from the electronic database of an "open" Swiss prison (n = 1206, 1379 measures) over a 5-year period (2010-2015). Measures included benzodiazepine prescription, duration of benzodiazepine use and mean dosage, and punishable behaviors (physical and verbal aggression, disinhibited but not directly aggressive behaviors, property damage or theft, substance-related offenses, and rule transgression). We assessed the relationship between benzodiazepine prescription and punishable behaviors after propensity score matching. Logistic regressions were also used to test the relationship of benzodiazepine use duration and dosage with punishable behaviors among participants who received benzodiazepines.

RESULTS

After propensity score matching, benzodiazepine prescription was not significantly associated with any punishable behavior. Among detained persons who took benzodiazepines, there was no significant association of dosage and duration of use with offenses involving illicit or addictive substance use or trafficking.

CONCLUSIONS

Our study did not empirically support the occurrence of increased aggressive or disinhibited behaviors or increased risk of substance abuse in detained persons who received benzodiazepines in prison. This suggests a need to reconsider restrictions in prescribing benzodiazepines in the prison setting.
Date of Publication
2021-05-20
Publication Type
Article
Subject(s)
600 Technology > 610 Medicine & health
Keyword(s)
Benzodiazepine Drug prescription Health care Prison
Language(s)
en
Contributor(s)
Baggio, Stéphanie
Starcevic, Vladan
Heller, Patrick
Brändle, Karen
Institut für Rechtsmedizin (IRM)
Forensisch-Psychiatrischer Dienst (FPD)
Franke, Irina
Schneeberger, Andreas
Buadze, Anna
Gamma, Alexander Xaver
Forensisch-Psychiatrischer Dienst (FPD)
Institut für Rechtsmedizin (IRM)
Schleifer, Roman
Forensisch-Psychiatrischer Dienst (FPD)
Gétaz, Laurent
Wolff, Hans
Liebrenz, Michael
Institut für Rechtsmedizin (IRM)
Forensisch-Psychiatrischer Dienst (FPD)
Forensisch-Psychiatrischer Dienst (FPD)
Additional Credits
Forensisch-Psychiatrischer Dienst (FPD)
Institut für Rechtsmedizin (IRM)
Series
Harm reduction journal
Publisher
BioMed Central
ISSN
1477-7517
Access(Rights)
open.access
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