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Table 3
Manic episode (mania), by age group and sex, household population aged 15 and over, Canada excluding territories, 2002

Manic episode (mania)                           Total population for the variable manic episode (mania) Manic episode (mania), all measured criteria are met Manic episode (mania), measured criteria not met Manic episode (mania), not stated
Number Number % Number % Number %
2002  
Total, 15 years and over 24,996,593 239,350 1.0 24,664,815 98.7 92,428 0.4
Men 12,286,109 116,757 1.0 12,128,101 98.7 41,251 0.3
Women 12,710,483 122,593 1.0 12,536,714 98.6 51,177 0.4
15-24 years 4,136,460 72,837 1.8 4,054,584 98.0 9,040 E 0.2 E
Men 2,111,183 26,853 E 1.3 E 2,080,171 98.5 F F
Women 2,025,278 45,984 2.3 1,974,413 97.5 F F
25-64 years 17,133,721 166,185 1.0 16,906,616 98.7 60,920 0.4
Men 8,543,283 89,904 1.1 8,425,976 98.6 27,403 E 0.3 E
Women 8,590,438 76,280 0.9 8,480,640 98.7 33,518 E 0.4 E
65 years and over 3,726,412 F F 3,703,615 99.4 22,468 0.6
Men 1,631,644 F F 1,621,955 99.4 9,689 E 0.6 E
Women 2,094,768 F F 2,081,661 99.4 12,778 E 0.6 E
1. Data source: Statistics Canada, Canadian Community Health Survey, Mental Health and Well-being, 2002 (updated in September 2004)
2. The survey excludes from its target population those living in the three territories, individuals living on Indian Reserves and on Crown Lands, residents of institutions, full-time members of the Canadian Armed Forces, and residents of certain remote regions.
3. The Mental Health and Well-being Survey is partially based on a modified World Mental Health version of the Composite International Diagnostic Interview (WMH-CIDI). The WMH-CIDI is a standardized instrument for assessment of mental disorders and conditions according to an operationalization of the definitions and criteria of DSM. DSM refers to the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders used by the American Psychiatric Association. It is an internationally recognized classification of mental disorders with several versions. Mental conditions or problems found in the CCHS 1.2 are partially coded either to DSM-IV or DSM-IIIR. Mental conditions or problems are derived from a set of questions pertaining to the feelings, the symptoms, severity, the intensity, and the impact relative to each of the measured disorders.
4. Population aged 15 and over classified as meeting or failing to meet criteria for manic episode (mania) in the 12 months prior to interview.
5. Manic episode (mania) is characterised by at least one period of a week or longer with exaggerated feelings of well-being, energy, and confidence or irritable mood during which a person can lose touch with reality. Symptoms of mania include: flight of ideas or racing thoughts; inflated self-esteem; decreased need for sleep; talkativeness; and irritability.
6. Bootstrapping techniques were used to produce the coefficient of variation (CV) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs).
7. Data with a coefficient of variation (CV) from 16.6% to 33.3% are identified by an (E) and should be interpreted with caution.
8. Data with a coefficient of variation (CV) greater than 33.3% were suppressed (F) due to extreme sampling variability.
9. The following standard symbols are used in Statistics Canada publications: (..) for figures not available for a specific reference period and (...) for figures not applicable.
10. CANSIM table number 01051100.
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