- cross-posted to:
- canada@lemmy.ca
- cross-posted to:
- canada@lemmy.ca
People aged 14 to 20 are more often being diagnosed with psychotic disorders, including schizophrenia, compared with those born earlier, a large Ontario study examining 30 years of data suggests.
To conduct the study, published in Monday’s issue of the Canadian Medical Association Journal (CMAJ), researchers looked at health administrative data from more than 12 million Ontario residents born between 1960 and 2009 to look for cases of a psychotic disorder.
In the Ontario study, those diagnosed with psychotic disorders not linked to mood disorders, such as schizophrenia, were more likely to be male, live in low-income neighbourhoods, be a long-standing resident of Canada and have received care for mental health disorders and substance use.
Why isn’t known. Myran and his co-authors suggest several possible reasons for the increases: older parental age, socioeconomic- and migration-associated stress and an increase in some negative childhood experiences like abuse in more recent decades.
Myran said there likely isn’t a single explanation, but he called substance use — including cannabis, stimulants, hallucinogens and synthetic drugs — a leading possibility contributing to the rising rates over 20 years.
We knew this would happen 20 years ago.
The lifetime occurrence of cannabis-induced psychosis symptoms is estimated to be 0.47% among people who use cannabis.2 The risk of cannabis-induced psychosis is elevated among those using high-potency THC (a product with > 10% THC) and those who use cannabis frequently, are younger, or are male.3,4 Evidence also suggests that a history of a mental disorder (e.g., bipolar disorder, depression, anxiety) increases the risk of psychosis. 2 More than half of patients with cannabis-associated psychosis recover within 24 hours, but those with prolonged symptoms (> 1 wk) or a history of psychosis have hospitalization rates ranging from 54% to 76%.2


