Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-2plfb Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-28T09:48:50.690Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Addiction and Violence Among People with Severe Mental Illnesses: An Updated Literature Review

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 March 2020

F. Fekih Romdhane
Affiliation:
Hospital Razi, Forensic Psychiatry Department, Tunis, Tunisia
A. Belkhiria
Affiliation:
Hospital Razi, Forensic Psychiatry Department, Tunis, Tunisia
J. Lamia
Affiliation:
Hospital Razi, Forensic Psychiatry Department, Tunis, Tunisia
R. Trabelsi
Affiliation:
Hospital Razi, Forensic Psychiatry Department, Tunis, Tunisia
I. Ghazeli
Affiliation:
Hospital Razi, Forensic Psychiatry Department, Tunis, Tunisia
R. Ridha
Affiliation:
Hospital Razi, Forensic Psychiatry Department, Tunis, Tunisia

Abstract

Introduction

Violence has important relevance for the criminal justice and health care systems especially forensic psychiatry. Previous studies reported the relation between violence, mental illness and substance abuse. We purpose to investigate the association between addiction and violence among people with severe mental illness through a review of literature.

Method

we conducted a Medline and Pubmed literature search of studies published between “2000 and 2015”, combining the terms “psychotic disorders”, “addiction” “substance use disorder”.

Results

The studies published showed that much of the excessive violence observed in patients with severe psychiatric disorders is due to co-morbid substance use. Increasing violence associated with substance use disorders in these patients had same level than that observed among subjects without severe psychiatric disorders. Increasing violence in subjects with substance use disorder but without severe mental disorders was higher than in patients with only severe mental disorders. In fact, mental disorders could increase the risk of installing on substance use disorders, and therefore increase the risk of partner violence. Among the substances used, if alcohol is frequently identified as a consumer risk for the emergence of violence among subjects with severe psychiatric disorders, stimulants could be causing more violence than alcohol.

Conclusions

Severe mental illnesses are associated with violence. However, most of the excess risk appears to be mediated by substance abuse co-morbidity. This finding improves the need of prevention of substance use disorders and emphasizes the fact that patients with severe mental disorders are more often victims than perpetrators of violence.

Type
e-Poster walk: Emergency psychiatry and forensic psychiatry
Copyright
Copyright © European Psychiatric Association 2017

Disclosure of interest

The authors have not supplied their declaration of competing interest.

Submit a response

Comments

No Comments have been published for this article.