Sunday, July 5, 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

Some 34,000 Quebec Teachers Off The Job To Protest Lagging Contract Talks

Some 34,000 Quebec Teachers Off The Job To Protest Lagging Contract Talks
MONTREAL — French-language public school teachers are off the job today in some parts of Quebec as they protest lagging contract talks with the provincial government.

Some 34,000 Quebec Teachers Off The Job To Protest Lagging Contract Talks

Judge Rules Against Hockey Icon Guy Lafleur In Civil Suit Targeting Crown, Cops

Judge Rules Against Hockey Icon Guy Lafleur In Civil Suit Targeting Crown, Cops
MONTREAL — A Quebec Superior Court justice has ruled against former Montreal Canadiens great Guy Lafleur in his $2.16-million civil suit that targeted police and the Crown following a 2008 arrest.

Judge Rules Against Hockey Icon Guy Lafleur In Civil Suit Targeting Crown, Cops

B.C. Lags In Protecting Sensitive Health Data: Privacy Commissioner

Privacy Commissioner Elizabeth Denham says authorities are not legally obligated to report privacy breaches, which could involve sensitive personal information from HIV tests, to mammograms or routine blood results.

B.C. Lags In Protecting Sensitive Health Data: Privacy Commissioner

Canada Approves Refugee Claim Of Man Who Fled Somalia After Death Threat

Canada Approves Refugee Claim Of Man Who Fled Somalia After Death Threat
The Immigration and Refugee Board told 32-year-old Yahya Samatar at a hearing in Winnipeg today that his claim was accepted.

Canada Approves Refugee Claim Of Man Who Fled Somalia After Death Threat

Retroactive change of law prompts OPP to drop probe of RCMP gun data destruction

Retroactive change of law prompts OPP to drop probe of RCMP gun data destruction
The Ontario Provincial Police have dropped an investigation into the RCMP's destruction of gun registry data, saying the alleged offences no longer exist under a back-dated, retroactive Conservative law passed last spring.

Retroactive change of law prompts OPP to drop probe of RCMP gun data destruction

Families First: Minister Lisa Raitt Urges Airlines To Stop Separating Parents, Children

 Canada's transport minister quietly wrote to the heads of every major airline in the country earlier this year to try and stamp out a practice where parents were being seated separately from their children on flights.

Families First: Minister Lisa Raitt Urges Airlines To Stop Separating Parents, Children