%0 Journal Article %T A prospective observational study of emergency department presentations following novel psychoactive substance use %A Blair Wilson %A Callum WD Innes %A David E Henshall %A Elaina Reda %A Ryan A Brown %A Scott R Morrison %A Seamus L Culshaw %A Shannon M McAllister %J Scottish Medical Journal %@ 2045-6441 %D 2018 %R 10.1177/0036933018760761 %X Novel psychoactive substances are compounds intended to mimic the effects of illicit drugs. They provide a unique challenge to healthcare, as complications of their use and their impact on services are relatively unknown. This study aims to determine nature of presentations, patient demographics and impact on healthcare. Novel psychoactive substances users who presented to a large urban emergency department over 4 weeks were prospectively identified and followed for 1 year. Patients over 13 years old were eligible for inclusion. Information regarding patient demographics and presentations was collected. During the study period, 53 patients (39 male), mean age 32.6£¿¡À£¿8.9 (¡Àstandard deviation), presented 148 times with complaints relating to novel psychoactive substances use. Study population characteristics included history of illicit drug use (83.0%), intravenous drug use (64.2%), psychiatric diagnosis or symptoms (56.6%), methadone prescription (52.8%) and having no fixed abode (37.7%). Injection was the most common method of use (72.3%), Burst the most commonly named agent (19.6%) and behavioural change the most common presenting complaint (31.1%). Patients collectively spent 10,620 h in hospital over 1 year. This study highlights differences between the young population targeted by government campaigns regarding novel psychoactive substances use and the presenting population to hospital, and the associated burden on the National Health Service %K Designer drugs %K legal highs %K emergency medicine %K synthetic cannabinoids %K cathinone %U https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/0036933018760761