Pubdate: Thu, 30 Aug 2007 Source: Hour Magazine (CN QU) Copyright: 2007, Communications Voir Inc. Contact: http://www.hour.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/971 Author: Amy German MONTREAL SUBSTANCE ABUSE LOWER THAN OTHER AREAS OF CANADA Montreal Not the Highest of Them All Though Montreal and Toronto may be hot spots on the North American party circuit, according to a new study done by the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health (CAMH), there are actually lower concentrations of substance abuse in both areas and in the corridor of land in between. The study, entitled "Geographical Variation in the Prevalence of Problematic Substance Use in Canada," was co-authored by three researchers from CAMH, and it discovered that there were markedly lower concentrations of substance abusers in both Quebec and Ontario as opposed to higher rates in both Eastern and Western Canada. "Vancouver is a little bit higher than Toronto and Montreal, and the difference is not great, but it's a little bit higher," says CAMH project scientist Karen Urbanoski. She goes on to say that "there were pockets of high use in all three cities, but overall [Toronto and Montreal] had a lower rate of problems." The CAMH study suggest that the prevalence of drug and alcohol abuse is higher in mid-sized cities than in larger ones or in rural areas, and Urbanoski theorizes that this is partially due to there being more opportunities for, and more variety of, social recreation in larger urban centres. Another possible contributing factor as to why the two central provinces have the lowest rates of boozers and users is, says Urbanoski, "the very low prevalence of substance abuse problems among immigrants, who tend to settle in cities." As Canada is not the easiest country to get into, the people that are likely to get into the country as of late, according to the study, "tend to be healthy and high-functioning, and some immigrant cultures also reject alcohol and drug use." What is really at the heart of the substance abuse discrepancy between the provinces is not really known, however, since, according to Urbanoski, "we have not tested [the theories] specifically so it's difficult to say." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake