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Canadian Journal of Public Health = Revue Canadienne de Santé Publique logoLink to Canadian Journal of Public Health = Revue Canadienne de Santé Publique
. 2009 Sep 1;100(5):393–396. doi: 10.1007/BF03405278

Changes in the Rates of Alcohol- and Drug-related Hospital Separations for Canadian Provinces: 1996 to 2005

Russell C Callaghan 120,220,, Scott A Macdonald 320
PMCID: PMC6973976  PMID: 19994746

Abstract

Objective

This paper aims to present the rates of drug-related hospital separations for amphetamines, alcohol, cocaine, cannabis and opioids for each province from fiscal years 1996 to 2005.

Method

Data were drawn from Canada’s Hospital Morbidity Database, a national electronic archive of all inpatient hospital admission records. All inpatient medical records with an alcohol- or drug-related diagnosis were abstracted for this study.

Results

Canadian rates increased during the 10-year period for all drugs; however, alcohol separations declined somewhat. The highest rates of drug and alcohol separations were most often found in BC, Alberta and the North. Nova Scotia and Newfoundland generally had the lowest rates of separations.

Conclusion

The study provides a detailed provincial and national account of alcohol- and drug-related morbidity related to inpatient hospital admissions. The rates of alcohol-related admissions across all provinces were, by far, much greater than those associated with drug-related episodes. The data provide an important measure of the harms related to substance use in Canada.

Key words: Alcohol, amphetamines, cocaine, opioids, cannabis, morbidity, hospitalization

Footnotes

Acknowledgements: A number of students helped to prepare and format this manuscript: Judith Wiedman, Roberto Gonzalez Lazo, and Matt Boire. We thank them for their hard work and dedication to scholarship.

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