Psychiatric News (6/29) reports, “People with substance-induced psychosis appear to be at a greater risk of dying earlier than those who do not experience psychosis,” investigators concluded in a study that included 9,303 people who “were diagnosed with substance-induced psychosis only, 2,197” who were “were diagnosed with schizophrenia following substance-induced psychosis, and 39,738” who “were diagnosed with schizophrenia without preceding substance-induced psychosis.” The study population “was followed until death, emigration, or August 10, 2017, whichever came first.” The study “revealed that the risk of death was elevated in people with substance-induced psychosis regardless of whether they later developed schizophrenia.” The findings were published online June 9 in the journal Addiction.
Related Links:
— “People With Substance-Induced Psychosis Found to Be at Greater Risk of Death Than General Population, Psychiatric News, June 29, 2021