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Digital Media and its Impact on Culture, Communication, Sport, and Education. The work on this website will be published in conjunction with the following news releases:A new study from Vanderbilt University, published in the online edition of Nature Communications, suggests that the same mechanism could be responsible for the rise of schizophrenia in America: a combination of high rates of smoking and poor mental health, both of which are associated with higher rates of schizophrenia.

The study, led by University of Kentucky professor Dr. Andrew Strom, shows that the combination of high rates of smoking and poor mental health causes schizophrenia in the United States.

To test the hypothesis, Strom and his team recruited 16 high school students who had been diagnosed with schizophrenia at several times the risk of being diagnosed with it.

They then measured their smoking for 5 years and then measured their mental health at 3 years of age. The results showed that when the teens completed the study, they had a higher incidence of schizophrenia than any other group.

The researchers found that among those who had the highest levels of smoking, schizophrenia increased from a 1 in 4 risk to 1 in 8 risk. Even among those who were on a low-risk level with low levels of smoking, the risk of schizophrenia increased from a 1 in 1 to an 8 risk.

"This finding is especially noteworthy because the prevalence of schizophrenia among adolescents and young adults in the United States is very high," Dr. Strom said. "Policymakers need to carefully consider both the prevalence of schizophrenia and the effect of tobacco smoke exposure on the risk of schizophrenia."

To be sure, tobacco use is not a major risk factor

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