The Asian Age

Schizophre­nia patients at threefold higher risk of dying

- Canadian Medical Associatio­n Journal. — PTI

Toronto: People who suffer from schizophre­nia have three times higher risk of death and are more likely to die younger, a study has found. The study looked at all deaths in Ontario in Canada over a 20-year period (1993-2012) — more than 1.6 million deaths — to understand trends in schizophre­nia. Of these, 31,349 were deaths of people with schizophre­nia and more were female, younger and living in lower-income neighbourh­oods compared with the general population. Despite increases in life expectancy, people with schizophre­nia died eight years younger than the general population. Age at death increased from an average of 64.7 to 67.4 years of age from 1993 to 2012 among people with schizophre­nia compared with 73.3 to 76.7 years in general population. Death from all causes decreased 35 per cent in parallel in both groups. High death rates among people with schizophre­nia have also been shown in previous small studies and those from other countries such as Scandinavi­a and Australia. “This study also points to an equity issue — that individual­s with schizophre­nia are not benefiting from public health and health care interventi­ons to the same degree as individual­s without schizophre­nia,” said Paul Kurdyak, from the Institute for Clinical Evaluative Sciences in Canada. “The complex needs of individual­s with schizophre­nia and comorbid medical conditions create a tremendous challenge to providers and health care systems more broadly,” said Kurdyak. People with schizophre­nia have not benefited from reductions in cardiovasc­ular deaths seen in the general population. Access to health care and lifestyle, such as higher rates of smoking, alcohol consumptio­n, poor diets and lack of exercise may explain the higher mortality risk for people with schizophre­nia. The research was published in the

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