- Service utilisation concentrated among young adult males: 83.8% male, 20-29 years comprise 42.1% of attendances.
- Polysubstance disorders predominate (55.8%), with cocaine, alcohol and cannabinoid disorders accounting for most remaining demand.
- Services are highly centralised: nearly 90% of attendances from metropolitan areas, indicating need for decentralised, gender- and age-sensitive care.
Int Rev Psychiatry. 2026 Jul 8:1-12. doi: 10.1080/09540261.2026.2683076. Online ahead of print.
ABSTRACT
Substance use disorders (SUDs) impose a substantial and evolving burden globally, yet real-world evidence on how addiction services are utilized in low- and middle-income countries remains limited. This study examined patterns of SUD-related service utilization (ICD-10 F10-F19) in Paraguay using routinely collected data from a national specialized treatment centre in 2024. A total of 18,149 attendances were analysed. Service utilization was heavily concentrated among young adult males (83.8%), with individuals aged 20-29 years accounting for the largest proportion of attendances (42.1%). Polysubstance use (F19) predominated, representing over half of all cases (55.8%), while cocaine-, alcohol-, and cannabinoid-related disorders accounted for most of the remaining demand. Age emerged as the primary factor shaping diagnostic patterns, with polysubstance and stimulant-related disorders clustering in younger groups and alcohol-related disorders increasing with age. Notably, service utilization was highly centralized, with nearly 90% of attendances originating from metropolitan areas. These findings suggest that current service models may be misaligned with the complexity and distribution of real-world demand, characterized by polysubstance use, demographic concentration, and geographic inequities. Strengthening decentralized, gender-responsive, and age-sensitive models of care will be essential to improving access and system responsiveness in LMIC settings.
PMID:42417044 | DOI:10.1080/09540261.2026.2683076
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