Author:
Mellsop Graham,Tapsell Rees,Holmes Pragya
Abstract
BackgroundRecently, publications have hypothesised that the demonstrated increase in the incidence of schizophrenia in New Zealand is a side effect of the increased strength of available cannabis derivatives over the last 25+ years and the much more recent increase in the population’s use of methamphetamine.AimTo compare the rates of later schizophrenia between age-matched mental health service users with initial diagnoses as alcohol abusers or illicit drug users.MethodFrom the PRIMHD comprehensive national database, all users of the mental health services over a 5-year period who received an ICD-10 presenting diagnosis of alcohol or substance use/abuse were identified. For each person identified, the database was examined for the following 3 years to determine the numbers later diagnosed with schizophrenia.ResultsFor the initial alcohol problem people in their twenties, 1.7% were diagnosed as suffering from schizophrenia in the subsequent 3 years. For the initial drug problem people, the rate was 10.9%. Within that drug-using population, the indigenous Maori developed schizophrenia at a higher rate than did the remainder of the population.ConclusionThese findings in New Zealand require further research into their generalisability, context and explanation.
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Neurology (clinical),Neurology
Cited by
3 articles.
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