Psychotic symptom and cannabis relapse in recent-onset psychosis - Prospective study


Autoria(s): Hides, L.; Dawe, S.; Kavanagh, D. J.; Young, R. M.
Contribuinte(s)

P. Tyrer

Data(s)

01/01/2006

Resumo

Background: Cannabis use appears to exacerbate psychotic symptoms and increase risk of psychotic relapse. However, the relative contribution of cannabis use compared with other risk factors is unclear. The influence of psychotic symptoms on cannabis use has received little attention. Aims: To examine the influence of cannabis use on psychotic symptom relapse and the influence of psychotic symptom severity on relapse in cannabis use in the 6 months following hospital admission. Method: At baseline, 84 participants with recent-onset psychosis were assessed and 81 were followed up weekly for 6 months, using telephone and face-to-face interviews. Results: A higher frequency of cannabis use was predictive of psychotic relapse, after controlling for medication adherence, other substance use and duration of untreated psychosis. An increase in psychotic symptoms was predictive of relapse to cannabis use, and medication adherence reduced cannabis relapse risk. Conclusions: The relationship between cannabis use and psychosis may be bidirectional, highlighting the need for early intervention programmes to target cannabis use and psychotic symptom severity in this population. Declaration of interest: None. Funding detailed in Acknowledgements.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:82135

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Royal College of Psychiatrists

Palavras-Chave #Psychiatry #Psychiatric Rating-scale #Substance Use Disorders #Schizophrenic Disorders #Expressed Emotion #1st-episode Psychosis #Life Events #Drug-use #Abuse #Vulnerability #Association #C1 #321021 Psychiatry #730211 Mental health
Tipo

Journal Article