Wednesday, July 1, 2026
ADVT 
National

Cocaine, Alcohol Use Can Increase Suicide Risk

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 10 Apr, 2016 12:59 PM
  • Cocaine, Alcohol Use Can Increase Suicide Risk
Using cocaine and alcohol together at the same time can lead to an increased risk of committing a suicide, warns a study.
 
 
According to researchers, specifically those using both, the chance of attempting suicide again were 2.4 times greater than among people in the study who were not.
 
"However, reporting both alcohol misuse and cocaine use was significantly associated with a future suicide attempt," said lead study author Sarah Arias from Alpert Medical School of Brown University in the US.
 
"Patients who have potentially co-morbid alcohol and cocaine use may be at a higher risk. Findings like these can be useful for informing suicide risk assessment," Arias added in a paper published in the journal Crisis.
 
The team examined 874 of suicidal emergency department (ED) patients who presented at one of eight emergency departments around the country between 2010 and 2012.
 
Individuals included in the analysis received standard care and either reported a recent suicide attempt or actively engaged in suicidal thoughts at the time of the initial ED visit.
 
Of the entire study population, 298 misused alcohol, 72 were using cocaine and 41 were using both.
 
The researchers found was that although people in the study reported misusing many different substances, including marijuana, prescription painkillers, tranquilizers and stimulants, but only cocaine and alcohol appeared to have a significant association with suicide risk.
 
"One unexpected finding was that, when examined independently, alcohol use had no significant association and cocaine use had a borderline significant association," researchers stated.
 
Older people, meanwhile, were more likely to have an association between substance misuse and suicide.
 
"These disparate findings emphasise the complex interaction of sex, substance use and suicide attempts," the authors added.

MORE National ARTICLES

Federal assisted death panel should be disbanded: advocacy groups

Federal assisted death panel should be disbanded: advocacy groups
OTTAWA — A three-member federal panel on assisted death created under the Conservative government should be disbanded, two advocacy groups argue.

Federal assisted death panel should be disbanded: advocacy groups

Alberta man accused of killing father and daughter needs further mental review

Alberta man accused of killing father and daughter needs further mental review
LETHBRIDGE, Alta. — A man accused of killing a two-year-old Alberta girl and her father will require further psychiatric assessment before it is determined if he is fit to stand trial.

Alberta man accused of killing father and daughter needs further mental review

ICBC blames highway bike death on cyclist negligence in civil lawsuit

ICBC blames highway bike death on cyclist negligence in civil lawsuit
VANCOUVER — British Columbia's public auto insurer says a cyclist's own carelessness led him to be run down and killed by an alleged impaired driver on a highway near Whistler.

ICBC blames highway bike death on cyclist negligence in civil lawsuit

B.C. man busted in national child-porn ring gets 90-day sentence

B.C. man busted in national child-porn ring gets 90-day sentence
VERNON, B.C. — An Enderby, B.C., man caught in a Canada-wide child-pornography ring has been sentenced to 90 days in jail.

B.C. man busted in national child-porn ring gets 90-day sentence

Six months in jail for B.C. man who beat dog named Bryn with baseball bat

Six months in jail for B.C. man who beat dog named Bryn with baseball bat
VICTORIA — A Victoria-area man who beat a dog with a baseball bat until it could barely walk has been sentenced to six months in jail and banned from owning animals for 10 years.

Six months in jail for B.C. man who beat dog named Bryn with baseball bat

B.C. court tosses mother's concerns over review into visits given to abusive dad

B.C. court tosses mother's concerns over review into visits given to abusive dad
VANCOUVER — A government-led review of the actions of British Columbia social workers who granted visits to a father who had sexually abused his four children will take place against the wishes of their mother.

B.C. court tosses mother's concerns over review into visits given to abusive dad