Substance use far higher in severely mentally ill

Study is largest assessment to date

 
 
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ZACH SMYTH / ERIC YOUNG

A higher incidence of chronic alcohol and tobacco use causes more deaths than suicide.

In the largest assessment of substance use among people with severe psychiatric illness, researchers at the School of Medicine and the University of Southern California have found that rates of smoking, drinking and drug use are significantly higher among those who have psychotic disorders than among those in the general population. The study is published online in the journal JAMA Psychiatry.

The finding is of particular concern because people with severe mental illness are more likely to die at a younger age.

“These patients tend to pass away much younger, with estimates ranging from 12 to 25 years earlier than individuals in the general population,” said first author Sarah M. Hartz, MD, PhD, assistant professor of psychiatry at Washington University. “They don’t die from drug overdoses or commit suicide — the kinds of things you might suspect in severe psychiatric illness. They die from heart disease and cancer, problems caused by chronic alcohol and tobacco use.”

"These patients tend to pass away much younger, with estimates ranging from 12 to 25 years earlier than individuals in the general population."
— Sarah M. Hartz, MD, PhD

The study analyzed smoking, drinking and drug use in nearly 20,000 people, including 9,142 psychiatric patients diagnosed with schizophrenia, bipolar disorder or schizoaffective disorder.

The investigators also assessed nicotine use, heavy drinking, heavy marijuana use and recreational drug use in more than 10,000 healthy people without mental illness.

The researchers found that 30 percent of those with severe psychiatric illness engaged in binge drinking, defined as drinking four servings of alcohol at one time. The rate of binge drinking in the general population is 8 percent.

Among those with mental illness, more than 75 percent were regular smokers, compared with 33 percent of those in the control group. There were similar findings with heavy marijuana use: 50 percent of people with psychotic disorders used marijuana regularly, versus 18 percent in the general population. Half of those with mental illness also used other illicit drugs, while the rate of recreational drug use in the general population is 12 percent.

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