Skip to main content

Motivation and context of concurrent stimulant and opioid use among persons who use drugs in the rural United States: a multi-site qualitative inquiry

Abstract

Background

In recent years, stimulant use has increased among persons who use opioids in the rural U.S., leading to high rates of overdose and death. We sought to understand motivations and contexts for stimulant use among persons who use opioids in a large, geographically diverse sample of persons who use drugs (PWUD) in the rural settings.

Methods

We conducted semi-structured individual interviews with PWUD at 8 U.S. sites spanning 10 states and 65 counties. Content areas included general substance use, injection drug use, changes in drug use, and harm reduction practices. We used an iterative open-coding process to comprehensively itemize and categorize content shared by participants related to concurrent use.

Results

We interviewed 349 PWUD (64% male, mean age 36). Of those discussing current use of stimulants in the context of opioid use (n = 137, 39%), the stimulant most used was methamphetamine (78%) followed by cocaine/crack (26%). Motivations for co-use included: 1) change in drug markets and cost considerations; 2) recreational goals, e.g., seeking stronger effects after heightened opioid tolerance; 3) practical goals, such as a desire to balance or alleviate the effects of the other drug, including the use of stimulants to avoid/reverse opioid overdose, and/or control symptoms of opioid withdrawal; and 4) functional goals, such as being simultaneously energized and pain-free in order to remain productive for employment.

Conclusion

In a rural U.S. cohort of PWUD, use of both stimulants and opioids was highly prevalent. Reasons for dual use found in the rural context compared to urban studies included changes in drug availability, functional/productivity goals, and the use of methamphetamine to offset opioid overdose. Education efforts and harm reduction services and treatment, such as access to naloxone, fentanyl test strips, and accessible drug treatment for combined opioid and stimulant use, are urgently needed in the rural U.S. to reduce overdose and other adverse outcomes.

Background

The U.S. has entered the “fourth wave” of the opioid overdose epidemic, characterized by increased concurrent stimulant and opioid use beginning in approximately 2018 [1, 2]. This epidemic includes the use of both substances simultaneously and the concurrent use of one substance within hours of the other. In the U.S., among persons who use opioids, the use of stimulants, particularly methamphetamine, has increased dramatically [3, 4] with past-month use increasing from 9 to 44% among people who use heroin between 2015 and 2019 [4].

The consequences have been deadly. Opioids were involved in approximately half of the deaths in the U.S. in recent years among those who use methamphetamine [5]; of cocaine-involved deaths, nearly three-fourths involved opioids [6]. The high rates of overdose and death have been attributable to the adulteration of potent synthetic opioid analogs into methamphetamine, cocaine, and heroin, often taken unintentionally [7, 8], although recent studies have shown rising intentional use with an emerging preference for fentanyl over heroin [2, 9, 10], with stimulants used to offset the heavy sedation of fentanyl [11].

Concurrent use of stimulants and opioids may lead to worse health outcomes when compared to using either drug alone. Concurrent use of methamphetamine and heroin has been associated with more frequent injection and acute problems such as higher rate of nonfatal overdose [12], higher rates of blood clots, skin infections and abscesses, and endocarditis [13], and are more likely to have chronic conditions including hypertension, cardiac disease, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, diabetes, kidney disease, hepatitis B or C, cancer, and HIV [14].

Until recently, the opioid overdose epidemic disproportionately impacted the rural U.S. population [15, 16]. Methamphetamine use rates are higher in rural compared to urban areas [14, 17], and rurality has been identified as a risk factor for use of heroin and methamphetamine together [4]. Among people who use drugs (PWUD), a 63% prevalence of using both methamphetamine and opioids has been observed in rural areas [12]. In general, factors for increased vulnerability to drug use among rural populations include low employment, poverty, less access to mental health services and to substance use treatment, and lower educational attainment [18]. Qualitative studies of motivations for dual stimulant and opioid use in rural populations illustrate the role of economic and associated mental health factors [19, 20] as well as other factors including intensive physical demands found within rural labor markets [20] and the need to remain productive [21].

To date, most qualitative studies of dual stimulant and opioid use have been conducted in urban populations [22], and most studies in rural populations have been small in sample size and restricted to specific regions [19, 20, 23]. Using interview data from 8 geographically diverse sites that comprise the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) Rural Opioid Initiative (ROI), and the benefit of a large sample size, we sought a fuller understanding of motivations and contexts for opioid and stimulant co-use use across the rural U.S.

Methods

Background

The ROI is a consortium of research studies funded in 2017 by NIDA to better understand the health impacts associated with the opioid crisis in rural parts of the United States (http://ruralopioidinitiative.org/) [24]. ROI consists of 8 sites spanning 65 counties across 10 states: Illinois (IL), Kentucky (KY), northern New England (NE, including Massachusetts, New Hampshire, and Vermont), North Carolina (NC), Ohio (OH), Oregon (OR), Wisconsin (WI), and West Virginia (WV). The initiative included standardized qualitative interviews across all sites with PWUD to better understand life history of opioid and other drug use, its context, and circumstances influencing health behaviors. Sites sent interview data to the Qualitative Core of the University of Washington Data Coordinating Center (UW-DCC) for data management and to centralize coding efforts.

Interview guide development

We developed a standardized semi-structured interview guide in collaboration with the ROI Qualitative Methods Workgroup, which consists of researchers with qualitative method expertise across ROI sites. Content areas included but were not limited to current and past unregulated opioid and other drug use, experiences with overdose, local changes in drug use patterns, harm reduction, and access to substance use treatment. Questions eliciting experiences with stimulant use included: first use of any drug; first injection drug use (IDU); current IDU, change in use of current injected drug over time; and differences in IDU preparation behavior between drug types. We note that the focus of the interview was on initial and current opioid and injection drug use, as interview guide development preceded the widespread use of stimulants in rural areas. Stimulant use was asked primarily in the context of current IDU.

Each site received approval from a local institutional review board and participant privacy was protected by a federal Certificate of Confidentiality.

Participant recruitment and data collection

We recruited PWUD to participate in a 60 to 90 min interview from 2018 to 2019. All participants had used non-prescribed opioids and were at least 18 years of age. Participant eligibility varied slightly between sites due to regional differences in drug use (Table 1). Participants were recruited from community-based programs, and at some sites, street outreach. Interested persons were administered informed consent per local site IRB protocols. Seasoned qualitative researchers conducted interviews in-person at each site, which were digitally recorded and transcribed verbatim. Depending on the site, participants were compensated $25-$50 for completing the interview.

Table 1 Criteria for questionnaire and qualitative interviews

Analysis

We conducted preliminary coding to categorize data by interview topic areas and lines of inquiry using the Dedoose qualitative software program (v. 09.0.62). Upon retrieval of the data related to stimulant use, we developed a thematic coding scheme based on the principles of Grounded Theory analysis [25, 26] in which two investigators each independently used an “open-coding” process to comprehensively itemize and categorize content stated by participants related to stimulant use. The two open-coders reconciled differences in categorization, facilitated by the UW-DCC Qualitative Core leadership, and established a set of fixed codes for application to interview content. Another set of coders independently applied the fixed codes, again meeting to reconcile differences in interpretation to ensure consistency in application. Finally, we conducted a qualitative memo-ing process with two independent coders to summarize content within each fixed category and met to establish interpretive agreement (Table 2).

Table 2 Demographic characteristics of interview participants

Results

We coded 1,672 excerpts from 349 PWUD interviews (64% male, mean age: 36 years).

Of PWUD who discussed current use of both stimulants and opioids (n = 137, 39%), the stimulant most mentioned was methamphetamine (78%) followed by cocaine/crack (26%).

Among those who reported recent use of both stimulants and opioids, some reported using them simultaneously, while others reported using the sequentially within a narrow time frame. Simultaneous use of both stimulants and opioids was discussed by 65 participants (47% of n = 137), and 73 participants (53% of n = 137) reported non-simultaneous use of the substances within a narrow time frame (e.g., taking a stimulant hours later to moderate the effect of an opioid, or vice versa). The dual use of methamphetamine and heroin was the most mentioned combination of drugs for simultaneous stimulant and opioid use (54% of 137) followed distantly by methamphetamine and pain pills, and cocaine and heroin (each 11% of 137). For non-simultaneous use in a narrow time frame, methamphetamine and heroin was again the most-mentioned combination (27% of 137), followed by methamphetamine and buprenorphine/naloxone (15%), methamphetamine and pain medication (14%), and methamphetamine and multiple opioid types (12%).

Motivations for stimulant use among persons who use opioids included: 1) change in drug markets and cost considerations, 2) recreational goals, such as using one drug to enhance effects of the other, to create a unique effect, or to achieve a heightened psychoactive effect after increased tolerance to opioids, 3) practical goals, such as balancing drug effects or alleviating each drug’s unwanted effects, including the use of methamphetamine for opioid overdose reversal or for managing opioid withdrawal symptoms; 4) functional goals, such as maintaining ability to work.

Changes in drug markets and cost considerations

While a confluence of several factors increased stimulant use among participants, in every region, this was underscored by a dramatic increase in the availability of methamphetamine:

…meth is everywhere. And it’s like I can’t even walk down the street without someone stopping and asking if I can find “fast” [methamphetamine] or whatever. (Man, 32, Wisconsin)

…the opioid problem was big. But now methamphetamines…inside [my county] ismassively taking over. (Man, 34, West Virginia).

Participants commonly described limited access to prescription opioids as a driver to other drugs:

Since they’ve made it harder to get prescription [opioid] medication, people have turned to heroin...or crystal meth. (Man, 36, West Virginia)

…you saw prescription pills not being available anywhere near as much and that’s when heroin started to really boom and then 3, 4 years ago is when you saw the huge boom from crystal meth (Man, 39, Wisconsin)

Opioids and cocaine were often described as cost-prohibitive, while methamphetamine was relatively cheap and abundant. For cost reasons, participants typically began substituting methamphetamine in place of pills or heroin:

I would buy [methamphetamine], because I mean, it was so much cheaper than $200 a day on [opioid] pills. $200 would last a month [for methamphetamine], you know what I mean? (Woman, 33, North Carolina)

A gram of heroin costs about anywhere from $160 to $200 and a gram of meth is about 50 bucks…much cheaper, that’s why a lot of people choose it over cocaine too. I’ll try to use [heroin] sparingly…but I’ll smoke meth all day throughout the day. (Man, 40, Illinois)

Regardless of region, diminished availability of prescription opioids, and an increase in availability of methamphetamine (and in many areas, heroin) set the stage for dramatic changes in type and frequency of drug use at the community level, as summarized by one participant:

People went from drinking, smoking weed…eating Percocet, doing a line of coke here and there to doing heroin to replacing the Percocet with heroin and then replacing the cocaine with methamphetamine. (Man, 24, New England)

Recreational goals: Seeking combined drug effects and stronger drug effects after heightened opioid tolerance

Participants described pursuit of a combination of psychoactive and physiological effects that were not attainable from either stimulants or opioids alone. Some described this in terms of a synergistic effect; others, in terms of a progression of desirable sensations. Many participants described using both drugs together to produce a unique effect, a euphoria that combined the best of each drug:

When you do them together [heroin/meth], it’s just to get a certain high. It’s a certain kind of rush. (Man, 25, Oregon)

It’s like [methamphetamine] goes up and [heroin] goes down, and you have to try to not necessarily meet in the middle, but get a good high somewhere in there. (Man, 29, Oregon)

Participants described simultaneous use of stimulants and opioids in terms of a desirable progression of sensations:

…when you do [meth and heroin] both together, your heart starts racing. Then you feel the warm feeling like your pain going away. (Man, 31, Kentucky)

I mix…a little bit of meth and heroin and coke. You get everything, and usually after you shoot up…then you get this fucking rush, and then all of a sudden you’re just buzzing from the heroin for hours…then, when you finally get out of that feeling, you’re fucking high as a kite on meth and coke. (Woman, 33, Oregon)

For those that did not inject the drugs simultaneously, there was a desire to control the timing of sensations. The most common preference was to start with opioids and follow with a stimulant:

I’ll do one and then do the other one. I’ll do the heroin first so I can get that good feeling. And then I’ll do the [methamphetamine] so I can take off. If I do meth first, then I have a hard time feeling the heroin. (Man, 38, North Carolina)

I like the rush from the heroin first. [Doing meth first] usually starts like you’re all warm, and then [makes fake retching noise]. It’s gross. (Man, 63, Oregon)

Finally, a common refrain among participants was a determination to pursue the combined effect even despite intense discomfort. In the words of one participant:

I’ll never forget the first time I [mixed fentanyl and meth], ... I had a script of fentanyl patches and I mixed 100 microgram patch, what I drew out of that, with a half a gram of meth, and I’ll never forget. I did that shot and I had to put a hand on each side of the wall because I literally felt like my brain was ripping in half and didn’t know which way I wanted to go. But whenever it came back to be tolerable, I just was whew, and it was like okay. I can do this….it’s an overwhelming euphoric effect. It’s almost like overload, literally. (Woman, 43, North Carolina)

Participants described building tolerance to their opioid of choice and mixing stimulants and opioids to re-experience the psychoactive effects felt when they initiated single drug use:

I couldn’t get high [on heroin] without the coke cause I had such a high tolerance. Even if I did 10 bags, I just didn’t get high anymore. So…you get high from the coke. (Man, 29, New England)

Upon reaching tolerance to opioid pills, one participant echoed others in describing the pursuit of a high by any means necessary, combining substances to simply get as intoxicated as possible:

After I had got my fill of the pain pills, I had started going to heroin. That was my favorite drug out of anything. Heroin spiked with cocaine; heroin was my thing. I had shot up in my neck. After I had moved back, I was still going down that same path. I was still shooting up. If it wasn’t heroin, it was meth. If it wasn’t meth, it was ice [smokable methamphetamine]. If it wasn’t ice, it was whatever I could get my hand on that was injectable. That’s what I used and my tolerance, like I just ... There were times that I wasn’t high and I wanted to get higher, so I would just do all these chem-, like all these substances together to get as high as I could. (Woman, 26, West Virginia)

Practical goals: balancing drug effects or alleviating unwanted drug effects

Participants referred to the use of stimulants and opioids in terms of achieving or restoring some kind of ‘balance’, for example, offsetting the unwanted effects of either the stimulant, the opioid or both. The most profound example of attempting to balance effects was the common strategy of using methamphetamine to reverse opioid overdose:

We’d been out of pills and heroin for a few days and I was really sick. A friend brought a friend, brought over a bunch of Klonopin...I was so sick that I made up a bunch of Klonopins and Dilaudids and shot them together, and somehow it just put me out for three days. They came to see me the second day, and my lips were turning blue and I just was barely breathing. So they went out and they got some meth and go, “Here, take this.” “Okay, yeah.” That buzzed me pretty good. (Man, 30, Oregon)

We’d mix a lot, like do heroin and put meth in it….it’s considered “speedballing,” but some people do it ‘cause it’s safer…they won’t fall asleep, because they’ve got the meth to counteract the fentanyl a little bit. That’s what a lot of us think…I mean, I honestly don’t know if it works that way, but it seems like it does, ‘cause [boyfriend] has always done it that way with mixing it, and then one day he didn’t mix it…he didn’t OD, but he almost did. (Woman, 36, North Carolina)

Participants described using stimulants and opioids simultaneously or in succession (e.g., within a few hours to a few days) in an attempt to alleviate unwanted side effects of the other drug. Typically, stimulants were used to “wake up” from using opioids:

… pain pills and cocaine, the mixture of the two, give off a different high. Because pain pills…give you what they call a nod. It’s like a down, a sleepy sensation. And the coke was always an up, upper like and you could do the two together and you’ll just stay up for longer periods of time without falling asleep. (Man, 45, West Virginia)

…if I did too much heroin and I’m tired, I’ll do some meth and it wakes me up. (Woman, 26, Oregon)

Stimulants were also used to offset feeling of nausea from opioids:

I’ve injected Opanas [opioid medication]. But just a little bit of them, and it was always with some speed, because they make me sick. Even taking Lortabs makes me sick, queasy, want to puke. (Man, 37, North Carolina)

At the same time, opioids were used to mitigate the effects of stimulants:

The heroin would make me relax from the crack. (Man, 38, Illinois)

Only reason why I do heroin is because I need to go to sleep because of [methamphetamine]. (Man, 21, North Carolina)

Finally, participants typically described using stimulants, particularly methamphetamine, to cope with acute withdrawal symptoms from opioids. In the words of two participants:

There’s been times before where I’ve been really bad off on the pills and couldn’t get any, so I’d do meth and it would make me not withdraw and I’d be super, duper high off the meth for three days. Then, three days later I’d finally sleep and then my withdrawals would be gone pretty much. Totally withdrawn. I wouldn’t need the pills as much. (Man, 25, North Carolina)

I usually would do [methamphetamine] when I start feeling fatigue or really sick or whatever from not having heroin (Man, 28, Oregon)

Functional goals

Participants were motivated by functional goals to use both stimulants and opioids. This included a goal of improving day-to-day functioning, often in the context of employment. Some sought a mix of feeling both energized and pain-free:

When you mix [methamphetamine and heroin]…it’s like you have energy, but you feel good. It’s like you don’t hurt, but you have energy. If you do just methamphetamine, there’s a lot of creaks—it’s like an old house—like your body just hurts. If you throw heroin in, then it’s like you get the energy without having to be the old house, without having to be like, “Oh, every bit of me hurts.” (Woman, 30, Oregon)

[Using meth and heroin] absolutely works, it kills pain…it’s going to elevate your mood, take away your depression…all the stuff that stimulants do. (Man, 48, North Carolina)

Participants noted the use of methamphetamine allowed them to continue to function and be productive:

Heroin is my drug of choice…I do speed to fucking function. (Man, 55, Oregon)

…it started off being that my drug of choice would be the opiate, but then I would do just a little bit of meth just to keep up with whatever I had to do that day. Like chores and like I had to help out with my dad. I had to do this or that and so just a little bit of meth would be helpful…as long as I get it in me I’m fine. (Woman, 49, North Carolina)

Many participants who used opioids noted the role of using methamphetamine to function for their employment, which typically involved physical labor:

I was running this landscape crew in Tennessee and would start every day by taking half a gram and dropping it in my Rockstar and drinking that…it keeps you awake. (Man, 25, North Carolina)

I do janitorial work…if I have to go to work, I’m going to do meth to get up. I’m going to work and get my job done, and then if I want to come down, I’m going to do heroin. (Man, 38, Oregon)

I do carpentry and odd jobs…anything from mowing yards to roofing to building houses…whatever. I try to find something to make money every day. You’ve got to live. It’s pretty physical work. But I can do one shot of meth, and I can be up for three days and nights constantly doing work, work, work. (Man, 46, Kentucky)

For many, financial hardship played a role in the use of methamphetamine. In the words of one participant:

I had three weeks to get in my power [bill] and everything before the snow was hitting the ground…my mom, my wife and everybody would have been without power, without heat. So I worked for about three weeks straight, 16 to 20 hour days, and meth was about the only thing that kept me able to do it. (Man, 33, Oregon)

One participant who used heroin and methamphetamine daily felt he needed methamphetamine to meet the physical demands of his employment, and spoke of limited opportunities for change:

I’ll do meth in the morning and then I’ll do heroin at night…I use meth pretty much at least five days a week. I use it, basically…as a tool to help me. I work a lot, and my job is demanding for hard work….I’m not 25 years old anymore. I work in a mill. My job is super fast-paced. Because of my record and stuff, I just can’t go and get the type of job that you have, or this or that. I have eight felonies on my record. I just can’t go and become anything I want to become anymore. (Man, 35, Oregon)

Discussion

In this large multi-site sample of PWUD living in the rural U.S., discussion of stimulant use among persons who used opioids was highly prevalent, corroborating what has commonly been named the “fourth wave” of the opioid overdose epidemic. Reasons for dual use were diverse. Changes in local drug access set the stage, primarily higher local availability of methamphetamine, which was lower in cost than opioids, coupled with the persistence of available heroin. Many were motivated by the unique euphoric psychoactive effects attainable from combining both substances, and the ability to tailor the progression of sensations. Several participants described having acquired an increased tolerance to opioids over time that prevented the desired euphoric feelings they had experienced in the past and sought stimulants for simultaneous use with opioids to augment or bolster these feelings. Participants also sought practical goals, such as to mitigate symptoms of opioid withdrawal, but most commonly to offset the unpleasant effects of either drug. This often created an ongoing cycle of attempts to self-medicate alternating drug-related side effects. The combination was at times used to help function in daily life, particularly in employment. Notably, methamphetamine was regarded as a tool to avert or reverse opioid overdose.

Our qualitative study is the largest and most regionally diverse sample of people who concurrently use stimulants and opioids in the rural U.S., corroborating findings in smaller and/or non-rural studies that have identified drivers of concurrent use, such as the desire for unique psychoactive effects [20, 21, 27], to offset or balance the adverse physical and psychological effects of the other drug [3, 4, 20, 28], and to alleviate opioid withdrawal symptoms [20, 27, 29]. We note that three of our findings appear particularly salient to the rural U.S. context, and less prevalent in studies limited to urban populations. First, our participants described significant changes in local drug availability as a key driver for their methamphetamine use. Methamphetamine was less expensive and described as more readily available than opioids, aligning with findings from smaller rural U.S. studies [19, 21] and a large national sample [3]. Second, in contrast to studies limited to urban populations, participants often described functional goals, such as “having energy and being pain free”, in order to be productive in daily activities including employment, echoing findings elsewhere [21, 23]. Such goals may be particularly salient in the context of rural life, in which jobs are more likely to involve physical labor [30] rendering this combination of effects critical to livelihood. Third, for several of our participants, stimulants were thought of as a tool for reversing or pre-empting opioid overdose, a phenomenon consistent with findings in smaller qualitative studies [21, 31] but not described in known studies of PWUD in non-rural U.S. areas.

We note the importance of the use of stimulants as a practical tool for our participants. Many participants utilized methamphetamine to avoid opioid overdose and death, but also to soften or bypass the discomfort and cravings that accompany opioid withdrawal. For many, stimulant use offered the hope of being both pain-free and functional; for others it was described in terms of attempting positive engagement in their daily lives through increased energy and productivity. At the root of these motivations are clear instincts for survival: self-preservation, a desire to transcend circumstances, the pursuit of a better quality of life. These instincts may be leveraged as opportunities to engage PWUD in utilizing and publicizing evidence-based methods of harm reduction, as well as an entry point for substance use treatment.

The rural context, however, poses many barriers to such opportunities. There is limited access to relevant harm reduction measures such as test strips for screening substances for fentanyl adulteration prior to use, naloxone for opioid overdose reversal, and substance use treatment, including behavioral health services and treatment with medication for opioid use disorder (MOUD) [32,33,34,35,36]. Treatment access in rural areas, already challenging due to long distances and limited options [32, 37,38,39,40] is further complicated by the complex issues surrounding treatment of concurrent stimulant and opioid use. Factors contributing to this void include lack of a current pharmacological intervention for treating stimulant use disorders; unwillingness of many buprenorphine prescribers to treat persons who also use methamphetamine (Korthuis 2021); and the negative impact of stimulant use on retention in treatment with MOUD [41, 42]. Effective, accessible treatment options are desperately needed. Intervention trials are needed to identify effective treatment for those with stimulant and opioid co-use, as there are limited evidence-based, effective treatment options that address both. An exception is the use of contingency management, for which there is strong evidence supporting its use in outpatient programs for treating both opioid and stimulant use disorders [43,44,45], particularly in the context of a supplemental community reinforcement approach [46]. The efficacy of cognitive behavioral therapy for stimulant use disorders remains contested [46, 47], requiring more research, particularly with respect to polydrug use.

The fourth wave of the current overdose epidemic, characterized by combined use of opioids and stimulants, shows no sign of abating in the U.S. Our findings underscore a need to increase rural PWUD’s access to harm reduction tools including fentanyl test strips and overdose reversal medication, and for effective substance use treatment including MOUD. Rural PWUD are attempting to address this themselves, utilizing unregulated stimulants in the absence of adequate public health measures. Transcending the barriers to harm reduction and substance use treatment requires multi-faceted interventions. There is an urgent need for interventions tailored to people who use multiple substances, such as overdose education specific to the context of concurrent opioid and stimulant use, and fentanyl test strip and naloxone distribution targeted to persons who use stimulants. Finally, PWUD may be turning to methamphetamine to reverse overdose out of lack of awareness, lack of confidence, or confusion surrounding Good Samaritan Laws [48, 49]. Changing these misunderstadings requires broader educational outreach to rural PWUD, who may fear prosecution from calling emergency services [50, 51]. Lastly, implementation strategies and outreach efforts are urgently needed to improve MOUD access and retention to those with co-occurring opioid and stimulant use disorder living in rural areas.

Study limitations

While we asked about current injection drug use of any type, we lacked a formal inquiry of current non-IDU stimulant use, which limited our ability to fully characterize modalities of stimulant use in rural areas. We did not probe on exact times of use, so discussions of concurrent use are necessarily simplified. Our data collection took place during the early stages of the fourth wave of the opioid overdose epidemic. As a result, our data may have included less mentions of unintentional opioid (e.g., fentanyl) use among stimulant users. Finally, we are limited by the relative racial and ethnic homogeneity of our sample which may obscure important differences in the experiences of PWUD who identify as nonwhite living in the rural U.S.

Conclusion

In a rural U.S. cohort of rural persons who use opioids, a large proportion reported simultaneous stimulant and opioid use, as well as use of one drug while under the influence of the other. Key reasons for use included the pursuit of a unique psychoactive effect and attempting to experience the effects of opioids after developing a tolerance. Practical goals included offsetting the effects of the other drug, including avoidance or reversal of opioid-related overdose, and management of opioid withdrawal. Participants also sought increased energy/productivity for daily functioning and employment. The use of stimulants for harm reduction goals highlights the need for better access to harm reduction and polydrug treatment resources for PWUD in rural settings. Future qualitative and ethnographic research should focus on polydrug use, given the rapidly changing drug supply, and novel combinations of opioid and stimulant use.

Availability of data and materials

We welcome collaboration and encourage mentorship and the use of the ROI data stripped of all protected health information (PHI) to enable early investigators to address meaningful questions with support to help ensure their success. Additional information can be obtained at the ROI website: ruralopioidinitiative.org or by contacting the ROI DCC at ruralopioidinitiative@uw.edu. Follow the Rural Opioid Initiative on Twitter @ruralopioids.

Abbreviations

IDU:

Injection drug use

MOUD:

Medications for opioid use disorder

NIDA:

National Institute on Drug Abuse

PWUD:

Person(s) who use(s) drugs

UW-DCC:

University of Washington Data Coordinating Center

References

  1. Jenkins RA. The fourth wave of the US opioid epidemic and its implications for the rural US: a federal perspective. Prev Med. 2021;152(Pt 2): 106541.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  2. Ciccarone D. The rise of illicit fentanyls, stimulants and the fourth wave of the opioid overdose crisis. Curr Opin Psychiatry. 2021;34(4):344–50.

    Article  PubMed  PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  3. Ellis MS, Kasper ZA, Cicero TJ. Twin epidemics: the surging rise of methamphetamine use in chronic opioid users. Drug Alcohol Depend. 2018;193:14–20.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  4. Strickland JC, Stoops WW, Dunn KE, Smith KE, Havens JR. The continued rise of methamphetamine use among people who use heroin in the United States. Drug Alcohol Depend. 2021;225: 108750.

    Article  PubMed  PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  5. Jones CM, Houry D, Han B, Baldwin G, Vivolo-Kantor A, Compton WM. Methamphetamine use in the United States: epidemiological update and implications for prevention, treatment, and harm reduction. Ann N Y Acad Sci. 2022;1508(1):3–22.

    Article  CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  6. Cano M, Oh S, Salas-Wright CP, Vaughn MG. Cocaine use and overdose mortality in the United States: evidence from two national data sources, 2002–2018. Drug Alcohol Depend. 2020;214: 108148.

    Article  CAS  PubMed  PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  7. National Institute on Drug Abuse. Overdose death rates. 2022.

  8. National Institute for Health Care Management. Charting the stimulant overdose crisis and the influence of fentanyl 2022 [Available from: https://nihcm.org/publications/stimulant-drug-overdose-deaths-2022-update?utm_source=NIHCM+Foundation&utm_campaign=0d48bba8cd-nihcm-newsletter-December-2022&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_6f88de9846-0d48bba8cd-167885964.

  9. Mazhnaya A, O’Rourke A, White RH, Park JN, Kilkenny ME, Sherman SG, et al. Fentanyl preference among people who inject drugs in west Virginia. Subst Use Misuse. 2020;55(11):1774–80.

    Article  PubMed  PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  10. Morales KB, Park JN, Glick JL, Rouhani S, Green TC, Sherman SG. Preference for drugs containing fentanyl from a cross-sectional survey of people who use illicit opioids in three United States cities. Drug Alcohol Depend. 2019;204: 107547.

    Article  CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  11. Duhart Clarke SE, Kral AH, Zibbell JE. Consuming illicit opioids during a drug overdose epidemic: Illicit fentanyls, drug discernment, and the radical transformation of the illicit opioid market. Int J Drug Policy. 2022;99: 103467.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  12. Korthuis PT, Cook RR, Foot CA, Leichtling G, Tsui JI, Stopka TJ, et al. Association of methamphetamine and opioid use with nonfatal overdose in rural communities. JAMA Netw Open. 2022;5(8): e2226544.

    Article  PubMed  PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  13. Glick SN, Klein KS, Tinsley J, Golden MR. Increasing heroin-methamphetamine (goofball) use and related morbidity among seattle area people who inject drugs. Am J Addict. 2021;30(2):183–91.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  14. Shearer RD, Howell BA, Bart G, Winkelman TNA. Substance use patterns and health profiles among US adults who use opioids, methamphetamine, or both, 2015–2018. Drug Alcohol Depend. 2020;214: 108162.

    Article  CAS  PubMed  PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  15. Centers for Disease Control. Rural America in crisis: the changing opioid overdose epidemic 2017 [Available from: https://blogs.cdc.gov/publichealthmatters/2017/11/opioids/?platform=hootsuite.

  16. National Center for Health Statistics. Urban-rural differences in drug overdose rates, 2020. Centers for Disease Control; 2022. Contract No.: 440.

  17. Jones CM, Compton WM, Mustaquim D. Patterns and characteristics of methamphetamine users among adults- United States, 2015–2018. Morb Mortal Wkly Rep. 2020;69:317–23.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  18. Rural Information Hub. Substance use and misuse in rural areas 2020 [Available from: https://www.ruralhealthinfo.org/topics/substance-use.

  19. Hansen ER, Carvalho S, McDonald M, Havens JR. A qualitative examination of recent increases in methamphetamine use in a cohort of rural people who use drugs. Drug Alcohol Depend. 2021;229(Pt B): 109145.

    Article  PubMed  PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  20. Lopez AM, Dhatt Z, Howe M, Al-Nassir M, Billing A, Artigiani E, Wish E. Co-use of methamphetamine and opioids among people in treatment in Oregon: a qualitative examination of interrelated structural, community, and individual-level factors. Int J Drug Policy. 2021;91:103098.

    Article  PubMed  PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  21. Baker R, Leichtling G, Hildebran C, Pinela C, Waddell EN, Sidlow C, et al. “Like Yin and Yang”: perceptions of methamphetamine benefits and consequences among people who use opioids in rural communities. J Addict Med. 2021;15(1):34–9.

    Article  PubMed  PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  22. Boileau-Falardeau M, Contreras G, Gariepy G, Laprise C. Patterns and motivations of polysubstance use: a rapid review of the qualitative evidence. Health Promot Chronic Dis Prev Can. 2022;42(2):47–59.

    Article  PubMed  PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  23. Rhed BD, Harding RW, Marks C, Wagner KT, Fiuty P, Page K, et al. Patterns of and rationale for the co-use of methamphetamine and opioids: findings from qualitative interviews in New Mexico and Nevada. Front Psychiatry. 2022;13: 824940.

    Article  PubMed  PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  24. Jenkins RA, Whitney BM, Nance RM, Allen TM, Cooper HLF, Feinberg J, et al. The rural opioid initiative consortium description: providing evidence to understand the fourth wave of the opioid crisis. Addict Sci Clin Pract. 2022;17(1):38.

    Article  PubMed  PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  25. Strauss AJC. Grounded theory methodology: an overview. In: Denzin N, editor. Lincoln Handbook of Qualitative Research. 1st ed1994. p. 273–84.

  26. Chun Tie Y, Birks M, Francis K. Grounded theory research: a design framework for novice researchers. SAGE Open Med. 2019;7:2050312118822927.

    Article  PubMed  PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  27. Palmer A, Scott N, Dietze P, Higgs P. Motivations for crystal methamphetamine-opioid co-injection/co-use amongst community-recruited people who inject drugs: a qualitative study. Harm Reduct J. 2020;17(1):14.

    Article  PubMed  PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  28. Steinberg A, Mehta A, Papamihali K, Lukac CD, Young S, Graham B, et al. Motivations for concurrent use of uppers and downers among people who access harm reduction services in British Columbia, Canada: findings from the 2019 Harm Reduction Client Survey. BMJ Open. 2022;12(5): e060447.

    Article  PubMed  PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  29. Silverstein SM, Daniulaityte R, Getz K, Zule W. “It’s crazy what meth can help you do”: lay beliefs, practices, and experiences of using methamphetamine to self-treat symptoms of opioid withdrawal. Subst Use Misuse. 2021;56(11):1687–96.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  30. Economic Research Service. Rural economy and population: business and industry.: U.S. Department of Agriculture; 2022 [Available from: https://www.ers.usda.gov/topics/rural-economy-population/business-industry/.

  31. Daniulaityte R, Silverstein SM, Getz K, Juhascik M, McElhinny M, Dudley S. Lay knowledge and practices of methamphetamine use to manage opioid-related overdose risks. Int J Drug Policy. 2022;99: 103463.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  32. Lister JJ, Weaver A, Ellis JD, Himle JA, Ledgerwood DM. A systematic review of rural-specific barriers to medication treatment for opioid use disorder in the United States. Am J Drug Alcohol Abuse. 2020;46(3):273–88.

    Article  CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  33. Centers for Disease Control. Still not enough Naloxone where it’s most needed 2019 [Available from: https://www.cdc.gov/media/releases/2019/p0806-naloxone.html.

  34. Gale J, Janis, J., Coburn, A., Rochford, H., . Behavioral health in rural America: challenges and opportunities. Rural Policy Research Institute; 2019.

  35. Davis CS, Lieberman AJ, O’Kelley-Bangsberg M. Legality of drug checking equipment in the United States: a systematic legal analysis. Drug Alcohol Depend. 2022;234: 109425.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  36. Miller EE, Ball J, Emery M, Robbins CB, Daniel J, Ahmed P, et al. Promoting harm reduction in rural South Dakota using an interdisciplinary consortium. J Am Pharm Assoc. 2023;63(1):366–73.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  37. Langabeer JR, Stotts AL, Cortez A, Tortolero G, Champagne-Langabeer T. Geographic proximity to buprenorphine treatment providers in the U.S. Drug Alcohol Depend. 2020;213:108131.

    Article  CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  38. Andrilla CHA, Patterson DG. Tracking the geographic distribution and growth of clinicians with a DEA waiver to prescribe buprenorphine to treat opioid use disorder. J Rural Health. 2022;38(1):87–92.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  39. Joudrey PJ, Edelman EJ, Wang EA. Drive times to opioid treatment programs in urban and rural counties in 5 US States. JAMA. 2019;322(13):1310–2.

    Article  PubMed  PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  40. Joudrey PJ, Chen K, Oldfield BJ, Biegacki E, Fiellin DA. Drive time to addiction treatment facilities providing contingency management across rural and urban census tracts in 6 US states. J Addict Med. 2023;17(5):615–7.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  41. Frost MC, Lampert H, Tsui JI, Iles-Shih MD, Williams EC. The impact of methamphetamine/amphetamine use on receipt and outcomes of medications for opioid use disorder: a systematic review. Addict Sci Clin Pract. 2021;16(1):62.

    Article  PubMed  PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  42. Krawczyk N, Williams AR, Saloner B, Cerda M. Who stays in medication treatment for opioid use disorder? A national study of outpatient specialty treatment settings. J Subst Abuse Treat. 2021;126: 108329.

    Article  CAS  PubMed  PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  43. Brown HD, DeFulio A. Contingency management for the treatment of methamphetamine use disorder: a systematic review. Drug Alcohol Depend. 2020;216: 108307.

    Article  CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  44. Bolivar HA, Klemperer EM, Coleman SRM, DeSarno M, Skelly JM, Higgins ST. Contingency management for patients receiving medication for opioid use disorder: a systematic review and meta-analysis. JAMA Psychiat. 2021;78(10):1092–102.

    Article  Google Scholar 

  45. Ronsley C, Nolan S, Knight R, Hayashi K, Klimas J, Walley A, et al. Treatment of stimulant use disorder: a systematic review of reviews. PLoS ONE. 2020;15(6): e0234809.

    Article  CAS  PubMed  PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  46. De Crescenzo F, Ciabattini M, D’Alo GL, De Giorgi R, Del Giovane C, Cassar C, et al. Comparative efficacy and acceptability of psychosocial interventions for individuals with cocaine and amphetamine addiction: a systematic review and network meta-analysis. PLoS Med. 2018;15(12): e1002715.

    Article  PubMed  PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  47. AshaRani PV, Hombali A, Seow E, Ong WJ, Tan JH, Subramaniam M. Non-pharmacological interventions for methamphetamine use disorder: a systematic review. Drug Alcohol Depend. 2020;212: 108060.

    Article  CAS  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  48. Pamplin JR 2nd, Rouhani S, Davis CS, King C, Townsend TN. Persistent criminalization and structural racism in US drug policy: the case of overdose good samaritan laws. Am J Public Health. 2023;113(S1):S43–8.

    Article  PubMed  PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

  49. Reader SW, Walton GH, Linder SH. Review and inventory of 911 Good Samaritan law provisions in the United States. Int J Drug Policy. 2022;110: 103896.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  50. Schneider KE, Park JN, Allen ST, Weir BW, Sherman SG. Knowledge of good samaritan laws and beliefs about arrests among persons who inject drugs a year after policy change in baltimore. Maryland Public Health Rep. 2020;135(3):393–400.

    Article  PubMed  Google Scholar 

  51. Koester S, Mueller SR, Raville L, Langegger S, Binswanger IA. Why are some people who have received overdose education and naloxone reticent to call Emergency Medical Services in the event of overdose? Int J Drug Policy. 2017;48:115–24.

    Article  PubMed  PubMed Central  Google Scholar 

Download references

Acknowledgements

This publication is based upon data collected and/or methods developed as part of the Rural Opioid Initiative (ROI), a multi-site study with a common protocol that was developed collaboratively by investigators at eight research institutions and at the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA), the Appalachian Regional Commission (ARC), the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), and the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA). The authors thank the other ROI investigators and their teams, community and state partners, and the participants of the individual ROI studies for their valuable contributions.

Funding

This [publication/presentation] is based upon data collected and/or methods developed as part of the Rural Opioid Initiative (ROI), a multi-site study with a common protocol which was developed collaboratively by investigators at eight research institutions and at the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA), the Appalachian Regional Commission (ARC), the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), and the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA). Research presented in this manuscript is the result of secondary data harmonization and analysis and was supported by grant U24DA048538 from NIDA. Primary data collection was supported by grants UG3DA044829/UH3DA044829, UG3DA044798/UH3DA044798, UG3DA044830/UH3DA044830, UG3DA044823/UH3DA044823, UH3DA044822/UH3DA044822, UG3DA044831/UH3DA044831, UG3DA044825, UG3DA044826/UH3DA044826, and U24DA044801 co-funded by NIDA, ARC, CDC, and SAMHSA. Author XAL was supported by K12HS026370 from the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality. The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality. The authors thank the other ROI investigators and their teams, the ROI Executive Steering Committee chair, Dr. Holly Hagan, the NIDA Science Officer, Dr. Richard Jenkins, and particularly, the participants of the individual ROI studies for their valuable contributions. A full list of participating ROI investigators and institutions can be found at ruralopioidinitiative.org.

Author information

Authors and Affiliations

Authors

Contributions

Concept development: RF, RB, SW, JB, AS, XL, JT Analytic leadership: RF Qualitative analysis: RF, AS, DC, RB, LM, AE, SW, JB, MP All authors reviewed the manuscript.

Corresponding author

Correspondence to R. J. Fredericksen.

Ethics declarations

Ethics approval and consent to participate

All studies had local institutional review board approval.

Consent for publication

Not applicable.

Competing interests

No competing declared.

Additional information

Publisher's Note

Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.

Rights and permissions

Open Access This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons licence, and indicate if changes were made. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article's Creative Commons licence, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. If material is not included in the article's Creative Commons licence and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. To view a copy of this licence, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated in a credit line to the data.

Reprints and permissions

About this article

Check for updates. Verify currency and authenticity via CrossMark

Cite this article

Fredericksen, R.J., Baker, R., Sibley, A. et al. Motivation and context of concurrent stimulant and opioid use among persons who use drugs in the rural United States: a multi-site qualitative inquiry. Harm Reduct J 21, 74 (2024). https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.1186/s12954-024-00986-z

Download citation

  • Received:

  • Accepted:

  • Published:

  • DOI: https://0-doi-org.brum.beds.ac.uk/10.1186/s12954-024-00986-z

Keywords