Psychotic Disorders Rising in Younger Canadians Amid Higher Substance Use: Study

canada-man

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The incidence of psychotic disorders has increased among younger Canadians, a trend that could be linked to a rise in the rates of substance use such as cannabis, according to a Feb. 2 peer-reviewed study published in the Canadian Medical Association Journal (CMAJ).
Researchers analyzed health administrative data of more than 12.23 million people from Ontario born between 1960 and 2009. They looked at diagnoses of schizophrenia spectrum disorder (SSD) and psychosis not otherwise specified (NOS), collectively referred to as psychotic disorders. The study assessed outcomes among these individuals over a 30-year period between 1993 and 2023.

Out of the 12.23 million people, 152,587, or 0.9 percent, were diagnosed with a psychotic disorder, the study said. The annual incidence of psychotic disorders was found to have increased by 60 percent among people aged 14 to 20 years between 1997 and 2023. Meanwhile, it was stable or even declined among those aged 21 to 50 years.

The incidence of schizophrenia was found to be 70 percent higher among individuals born in 2000-2004 compared to those born during 1975-79.

The percentage of people diagnosed with a psychotic disorder at 20 years of age was 104 percent higher among those born in 2000-2004, according to the study.

Among the 1975–1979 birth cohort, the mean age of diagnosis of psychotic disorders was 25.4 years, which declined to 23.2 years in the 1990-1994 cohort.


“Rates of substance use—including cannabis, stimulants, hallucinogens, and synthetic drugs—have increased over time in Canada; use of these substances is associated with the development and worsening of psychotic disorders,” the study noted.



The study cited other potential factors contributing to higher incidences of psychotic disorders among the younger groups, including the expansion of early psychosis intervention programs, socioeconomic stress, adverse childhood experiences, changes in maternal and neonatal health, and changing environmental exposure, such as urbanization.

A Feb. 2 CMAJ statement published on EurekAlert said recent studies from Australia and Denmark have also found schizophrenia diagnoses increasing among younger individuals over time, with the Ontario study contributing further evidence on this matter.

“We don’t yet know what’s driving these changes, and it’s likely there isn’t a single explanation. Understanding what’s behind this trend will be critical to prevention and early support,” Dr. Daniel Myran, one of the authors of the study, said.

“A leading possibility is substance use—including cannabis, stimulants, hallucinogens, and synthetic drugs. The use of substances, especially earlier in life, is associated with the development and worsening of psychotic disorders, and substance use in Canada has risen over the past two decades.”

The study was funded by Charite Universitatsmedizin Berlin, a leading university hospital in Germany; the University of Ottawa; North York General Hospital; and the Canada Research Chairs program, a grant by the Canadian government. Another researcher revealed competing interests, including receiving consulting fees and honoraria from several pharma companies such as AbbVie and Boehringer Ingelheim.

Psychotic Disorders Rising in Younger Canadians Amid Higher Substance Use: Study | The Epoch Times
 

xix

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La la land

richaceg

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Retail cannabis stores seems like a good idea on the outskirts but irresponsible parents who have easy access to Cannabis spells disaster... When you're high and spaced out...you might want to check your inventory when you wake up. I don't think injection sites are a good idea either. You simply don't give a dope addict a taste or a small fix...it doesn't work.
 

canada-man

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The province of Ontario did something last month it has never done before — it defunded a supervised injection site because the chaos and disorder it was causing had reached unacceptable levels for the surrounding neighbours.

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The injection site is in Parkdale, a neighbourhood on the west side of Toronto. The community’s efforts to get the province to act were detailed in my previous column at the beginning of October. Ontario Health Minister Sylvia Jones was simply unable to ignore the mountain of photographic evidence featuring prostrate bodies next to piles of used needles as known drug dealers operated nearby.

 

Carpa

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Some of these diseases like Schizophrenia are very awful, you keep hearing voices that tell you terrible stuff. My Doctors teen daughter hanged herself, because nothing was helping.
 
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Alcohol was banned once too but it's legal. It's up to those who can buy it at deciding if they want something with a higher percentage of alcohol or less similar to those buying weed with higher THC count. The package already mentions warnings about the effects it can have on your body long term. Fat people buy too much junk even though now most packaging mention what they are high in. It's not the governments job to ban sugar, caffeine, alcohol and now weed. Law enforcement have better things to do than detain someone for a small amount of weed especially if it's rookie cop back in the day who wanted to book for you walking around with an ounce or something based on his mood. Quite a few people over 19 who are buying weed realize it's triggering their anxiety and stopping. Others who aren't are no different than those who drink more alcohol in a week compared to others.
I agree, self moderation is the responsibility of the individual. Legalize ALL drugs. If you can't control your consumption of bath salts it's not the problem of society as a whole. People really need to get their shit together.
 
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