Four in five teens with cannabis issues also have mental health diagnoses

Trends in the diagnostic prevalence of cannabis-related disorders and co-occurring psychiatric disorders in adolescents: analysis of German health insurance data from 2013 to 2022.

European journal of public health β€’ β€’ Highly Relevant
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AI Summary

A comprehensive analysis of nearly 4 million German adolescents' health records from 2013 to 2022 reveals a concerning 22.4% increase in diagnosed cannabis-related disorders among teens aged 12-17 seeking outpatient treatment. The diagnostic prevalence rose from 0.08% to 0.10% over the decade, with older teens showing higher rates and males outpacing females from age 15 onwards. Interestingly, the pandemic years saw a temporary decline, but rates have since rebounded. The data shows that younger teens under 14 had equal rates between sexes, suggesting that cannabis-related disorders emerge without gender differences in early adolescence.

The most striking finding is that 78.3% of adolescents diagnosed with cannabis-related disorders had at least one co-occurring psychiatric condition in 2022. Depression emerged as the most common comorbidity, followed by conduct disorders, adjustment disorders, ADHD, and anxiety disorders. This high rate of dual diagnosis challenges the notion that cannabis use in teens is merely experimental behavior, instead revealing it as deeply intertwined with broader mental health struggles. The researchers emphasize the urgent need for integrated treatment approaches that address both cannabis use and mental health simultaneously, rather than treating them as separate issues. For parents, clinicians, and policymakers, these findings underscore that adolescent cannabis problems rarely occur in isolation and require comprehensive psychiatric evaluation and care.

πŸ’‘ Key Findings

1
Diagnosed cannabis-related disorders in German adolescents increased by 22.4% from 2013 to 2022, rising from 0.08% to 0.10% prevalence among teens seeking outpatient treatment
High
90%
2
78.3% of adolescents with cannabis-related disorders had at least one co-occurring psychiatric diagnosis, indicating that isolated cannabis problems are rare in this age group
High
95%
3
Depression was the most common co-occurring condition, followed by conduct disorders, adjustment disorders, ADHD, and anxiety disorders in teens with cannabis diagnoses
High
90%
4
Gender distribution was equal up to age 14, but males showed higher diagnostic prevalence from age 15 onwards, suggesting sex-specific risk patterns emerge in mid-adolescence
High
85%
5
Diagnostic prevalence temporarily declined during the COVID-19 pandemic before rebounding, possibly reflecting reduced healthcare access rather than decreased cannabis problems
Good
75%

πŸ“„ Original Abstract

Cannabis use can have detrimental effects on adolescents' mental health, often co-occurring with child and adolescent psychiatric disorders (CAPD). This study assessed diagnostic prevalence trends in cannabis-related disorders and co-occurring diagnosed CAPD in adolescents receiving outpatient treatment in Germany. Outpatient claims data from the national public health insurance system, covering almost 4 million children and adolescents, were assessed for diagnostic prevalence of cannabis-related disorders (ICD-10 diagnoses F12.X) in insurees aged 12 to 17 years for the years 2013-22, stratified by age group and sex. In addition, the diagnostic prevalence of co-occurring CAPD during the year 2022 was evaluated. From 2013 to 2022, the diagnostic prevalence of cannabis-related disorders among German adolescents utilizing outpatient services increased from 0.08% to 0.10% (+22.4%), with a decline during the COVID-19 pandemic and a higher diagnostic prevalence in older adolescents. Up to 14 years of age, the diagnostic prevalence of cannabis-related disorders was distributed evenly among males and females, while from age 15 onwards, the diagnostic prevalence was higher in males. Overall, 78.3% of adolescents diagnosed with cannabis-related disorders had at least one co-occurring CAPD diagnosis in 2022. Most common co-occurring conditions were depressive disorders, conduct disorders, adjustment disorders, attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorders, and anxiety disorders. Co-occurring depression was particularly often diagnosed, underscoring the urgent need for integrated treatment approaches addressing both disorders simultaneously in this age group.

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