|
Media and Events
|
People who use prescription opioids non-medically may have undiagnosed mental health problems, pain
People who use prescription opioids “non-medically” commonly suffer from a combination of mental health problems and pain,
according to a new CAMH study published in the Canadian Journal of Psychiatry. Non-medical use means the opioids have not been prescribed by a doctor, or are not being used for the purposes they were
prescribed for.
Based on this finding, CAMH scientist Dr. Benedikt Fischer and colleagues recommend that patients who make non-medical use of prescription opioids be screened for undiagnosed or untreated
mental health problems and/or pain. North America has the highest and a steeply rising rate of consumption of prescription
opioid drugs. “As prescription opioids are widely available and used in North America, they may increasingly be used in non-medical
ways for pain or mental health problems not effectively diagnosed or treated,” note the authors. This growing problem can
only be effectively addressed if its link to mental health and pain problems are more effectively identified, prevented and
treated, they say.
|
|