Your Medication Use Appears Within Expected Bounds
Based on your answers, your use of prescription medication doesn’t currently show strong signs of problematic use. That’s reassuring – but there are still important things to know about long-term medication use.
What your answers suggest
You’re taking medication largely as prescribed, you haven’t experienced significant withdrawal symptoms, and it isn’t meaningfully affecting your daily life. You may be here because you’ve read about prescription drug problems and want to check you’re OK – that’s a sensible thing to do.
What to be aware of going forward
Even when medication is taken exactly as prescribed, certain drugs carry dependence risk:
- Opioid painkillers (codeine, tramadol, oxycodone, Zapain, Percocet): Tolerance and dependence can develop within 1-2 weeks of continuous use.
- Benzodiazepines (diazepam, alprazolam, lorazepam): Clinical guidelines recommend short-term use only (2-4 weeks). Long-term use significantly increases dependence risk.
- Gabapentinoids (gabapentin, pregabalin): Increasingly recognised as having dependence potential, especially at higher doses.
- Sleeping pills (zopiclone, zolpidem): Designed for short-term use. Effectiveness decreases within 2 weeks, but dependence can persist.
Protective steps
- Have regular medication reviews (at least annually for any ongoing prescription).
- Never increase your dose without professional guidance.
- If you’ve been on medication for longer than initially intended, discuss a reduction plan at your next review.
- f you notice you’re thinking about the medication more, needing more for the same effect, or feeling uncomfortable without it – retake this assessment.
This is informational guidance, not a medical diagnosis.
Everything you’ve shared is completely confidential. Our advice line is free and staffed by trained professionals.
