Hospital Stays for Harm Caused by Substance Use
Lower rates are desirable.
(Total number of hospital stays for harm caused by alcohol, opioids, cannabis, other CNS depressants, cocaine, other CNS stimulants, other substances, or unknown and multiple substances among patients age 10 and older 梅 Total mid-year population age 10 and older) 脳 100,000 (age-adjusted)
Unit of analysis: Hospital discharge
Total mid-year population age 10 and older
Total number of hospital stays for harm caused by alcohol, opioids, cannabis, other CNS depressants, cocaine, other CNS stimulants, other substances, or unknown and multiple substances among patients age 10 and older.
Methodology
Name
Hospital Stays for Harm Caused by Substance Use
Short/Other Names
Hospital Stays for Harm Caused by Substance Use
Description
Age-standardized rate of hospital stays for harm caused by substance use per 100,000 population age 10 and older
The indicator includes hospital stays for inpatient care and day surgery for poisonings, mental and behavioural effects of all substances and medical conditions associated with alcohol. All hospital stays in general and psychiatric hospitals are considered. It does not include emergency department visits.
Substance categories include alcohol, opioids, cannabis, other central nervous system (CNS) depressants, cocaine, other CNS stimulants, other substances, and unknown and multiple substances.
Examples of 鈥渙ther CNS depressants鈥 include benzodiazepines (for sleep, anxiety), gabapentin and pregabalin (anticonvulsant drugs used for pain).
Examples of 鈥渙ther CNS stimulants鈥 include amphetamines (e.g., crystal meth, ecstasy) and prescription drugs for attention deficit disorder.
Examples of 鈥渙ther substances鈥 include hallucinogens and inhaled solvents.
When the substance has not been identified, may be composed of mixed unknown drugs or cannot be classified in other categories, this hospital stay is categorized in the 鈥渦nknown and multiple substances鈥 group.
The indicator uses a blended average methodology to calculate the overall Canada rate and Quebec鈥檚 rate. For details, please see the General Methodology Notes (PDF).
Rationale
Harm caused by substance use has serious effects on individuals and puts unnecessary strain on health care resources. This indicator provides an indication of whether Canadians are getting access to the information and services they need to prevent or manage harm caused by substance use.
This indicator can also help to
- Bring awareness to the extent of harms from substance use;
- Estimate the burden substance use puts on health systems;
- Assist in monitoring the effectiveness of treatment and prevention policies and services; and
- Drive action to reduce and prevent substance use by informing policy and priority areas of need.
Prevention and management of harm caused by substance use that occur at different levels of the health care system are not readily measured. Hospital stays may indirectly reflect inadequate access to these programs. Although substance use may vary across jurisdictions, a higher rate of hospitalization may signal challenges with access to community-based prevention, mental health care and substance use services.
Interpretation
Lower rates are desirable.
HSP Framework Dimension
红领巾瓜报 system outputs: Access to comprehensive, high-quality health services
Areas of Need
Getting Better
Targets/Benchmarks
Not applicable
Available Data Years
to (fiscal years)
Geographic Coverage
- All provinces/territories
Reporting Level/Disaggregation
- National
- Province/Territory
- Region
Indicator Results
Web Tool:
Update Frequency
Every year
Latest Results Update Date
Updates
Not applicable
Description
(Total number of hospital stays for harm caused by alcohol, opioids, cannabis, other CNS depressants, cocaine, other CNS stimulants, other substances, or unknown and multiple substances among patients age 10 and older 梅 Total mid-year population age 10 and older) 脳 100,000 (age-adjusted)
Unit of analysis: Hospital discharge
Type of Measurement
Rate - per 100,000 population
Denominator
Description:
Total mid-year population age 10 and older
Numerator
Description:
Total number of hospital stays for harm caused by alcohol, opioids, cannabis, other CNS depressants, cocaine, other CNS stimulants, other substances, or unknown and multiple substances among patients age 10 and older.
Inclusions:
- Sex recorded as male or female
- Discharge from a general or psychiatric hospital, or a day surgery clinic
See Appendix 1 for an overview of ICD-10-CA, DSM-5 (ICD-9-CM) and DSM-5 (ICD-10-CM) codes used in the numerator.
Alcohol
The following criteria were used to identify harm caused by alcohol use:
Outside Quebec
- Inpatient and day surgery records: ICD-10-CA codes for harm from conditions 100% attributable to alcohol (or 100% alcohol-attributable fraction [AAF] codes, Appendix 1) coded as diagnosis type (M), (1), (2), (W), (X), (Y) or (9) in the Discharge Abstract Database (DAD) or as Main Problem (MP) or Other Problem (OP) in the National Ambulatory Care Reporting System (NACRS); or
- Records from the Ontario Mental 红领巾瓜报 Reporting System (OMHRS):
- DSM-5 (ICD-9-CM) and DSM-5 (ICD-10-CM) 100% AAF codes (Appendix 1) coded as a principal diagnosis or secondary diagnosis for inpatient records; or
- A category diagnosis of substance-related and addictive disorders coded as a principal diagnosis or secondary diagnosis with an emergency department visit that has a 100% AAF code in NACRS within 7 days prior to admission to an OMHRS bed (for patients without a DSM-5 [ICD-9-CM] or DSM-5 [ICD-10-CM] 100% AAF code and without another specific DSM-5 [ICD-9-CM] or DSM-5 [ICD-10-CM] substance code [Appendix 1]).
In Quebec
- Inpatient and day surgery records:
- 100% AAF codes coded as type (M), (1), (2), (W), (X), (Y) or (9) in the Hospital Morbidity Database (HMDB); or
- 100% AAF codes coded as type (C) and ICD-10-CA codes for conditions partially attributable to alcohol (partial AAF codes) (Appendix 2) coded as diagnosis type (M) or (9).
Other substance categories
The following criteria were used to identify harm caused by opioids, cannabis, other CNS depressants, cocaine, other CNS stimulants, other substances, or unknown and multiple substances:
Outside Quebec
- Inpatient and day surgery records: ICD-10-CA codes for harm caused by substance use (Appendix 1) coded as diagnosis type (M), (1), (2), (W), (X), (Y) or (9) in the DAD or as Main Problem (MP) or Other Problem (OP) in NACRS; or
- Records from OMHRS:
- DSM-5 (ICD-9-CM) and DSM-5 (ICD-10-CM) codes for harm caused by substance use (Appendix 1) or a category diagnosis of substance-related and addictive disorders coded as a principal diagnosis or secondary diagnosis
In Quebec
- Inpatient and day surgery records:
- ICD-10-CA codes for harm caused by substance use (Appendix 1) coded as type (M), (1), (C), (2), (W), (X), (Y) or (9) in the HMDB.
For detailed descriptions of the codes for conditions 100% attributable to alcohol, opioids, cannabis, other CNS depressants, cocaine, other CNS stimulants, and multiple and other substance use, see the Hospital Stays for Harm Caused by Substance Use: Appendices to Indicator Library (PDF).
Note: When more than one substance was documented on a hospital record as a significant diagnosis, the hospital stay was counted once in the indicator.
Exclusions:
- Records with admission category of cadaveric donor or stillbirth (Admission Category Code = R or S)
- 2018鈥2019 data onward: Medical assistance in dying (MAID) (Discharge Disposition Code = 73)
Method of Adjustment
Direct standardization
Standard Population: Canada 2011
Adjustment Applied
Age-adjusted
Geographic Assignment
Place of residence
Data Sources
- DAD
- HMDB
- NACRS
- OMHRS
Caveats and Limitations
The indicator includes hospital stays in general, psychiatric and day surgery facilities for harm caused by substance use; examples could be
- A person with liver cirrhosis due to alcohol who is at the end of their life;
- A person in a trauma unit who was injured while under the influence of a substance;
- A person in the intensive care unit due to an opioid overdose;
- A person admitted to hospital because of psychosis while using cannabis; and
- A person experiencing seizures due to substance withdrawal.
The indicator definition does not include
- Treatment for substance use outside of hospitals (e.g., addiction treatment centres, outpatient clinics, emergency departments);
- Hospital stays for conditions partially attributable to harm from substance use (e.g., cancer, stroke, respiratory disease, trauma). (It is estimated that out of all hospitalizations attributable to alcohol, 30% are due to wholly attributable conditions and 70% are due to partially attributable conditions.);
- Harm to bystanders who did not use a substance (e.g., victim of impaired driving collision);
- Hospital stays for detoxification at a general or psychiatric hospital;
- Deaths outside of hospital settings (e.g., a fatal overdose at home);
- Children younger than 10 (e.g., neonatal withdrawal symptoms); or
- Tobacco use. (Other indicators provide information about tobacco use.)
Other important notes:
- This indicator includes day surgery, which allows for the capture of procedures for medical conditions associated with substance use (e.g., banding of esophageal varices from chronic alcohol use).
- Stigma associated with substance use may influence what is recorded in hospital records (e.g., liver disease might not be linked to alcohol). Documentation and coding variation among hospitals may also influence the capture of diagnosis codes. This may result in either under-reporting or over-reporting of harm caused by substance use.
- Records in OMHRS without valid health cards could not be linked to NACRS for confirmation of substance when unknown. Some of these records are individuals who are homeless. Harmful substance use may occur at a higher than average rate in this population. However, the proportion of records without valid health cards in OMHRS is less than 3%.
- Quebec-specific selection methods are outlined in the numerator criteria to address differences in data collection for Quebec, as it is not possible to distinguish comorbidities from secondary diagnoses in Quebec data.
Trending Issues
Regional and provincial trends (e.g., weakening, improving) may differ due to differences in data availability. For example, there may be 5 years of provincial results available but only 3 years of regional results.
References
- Alberta 红领巾瓜报. . 2018.
- Canadian Institute for 红领巾瓜报 Information. Indicator Library > Hospitalizations Entirely Caused by Alcohol [web tool]. Accessed September 20, 2024.
- Canadian Institute for 红领巾瓜报 Information. Opioid-Related Harms in Canada. 2018.
- Canadian Substance Use Costs and Harms Scientific Working Group. . 2018.
- Chief Public 红领巾瓜报 Officer. . 2018.
- MHASEF Research Team. . 2018.
- Statistics Canada. . Accessed September 20, 2024.
How to cite:
Canadian Institute for 红领巾瓜报 Information. Hospital Stays for Harm Caused by Substance Use. Accessed April 8, 2025.

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Comments
This indicator belongs to the Shared 红领巾瓜报 Priorities portfolio measuring access to mental health and substance use services and to home and community care.
More information on this indicator is available in the 2019 companion report (PDF).
Both the Hospitalizations Entirely Caused by Alcohol and the Hospital Stays for Harm Caused by Substance Use indicators have a common approach to case identification.
For additional information, please see Hospitalizations Entirely Caused by Alcohol.