TORONTO -- Cannabis use could be helping Canadians alleviate some of the effects of post-traumatic stress disorder, according to new research from the BC Centre on Substance Use and University of British Columbia.

The study, published in the , found people with PTSD who were not using cannabis were ā€œfar more likelyā€ to have suicidal thoughts and suffer from severe depression than self-proclaimed pot users, according to data taken from .

People who suffered trauma -- including survivors of acute injury, violence, conflict and disasters -- suffer at disproportionately higher rates of depression, suicide and substance abuse than the general population.

The research team found that among non-cannabis users, PTSD was ā€œsignificantly associatedā€ with a major recent depressive episode and suicidal thoughts.

More specifically, PTSD sufferers who didnā€™t use pot were seven times more likely to have a depressive episode and nearly five times more likely to have suicidal thoughts compared to non-cannabis users without PTSD.

ā€œAmong the cannabis-non-using population, there was a strong association between having PTSD and experiencing these indicators of severe mental distress,ā€ lead author Stephanie Lake said during a phone interview with CTVNews.ca, adding that pot users didnā€™t see this same association.

Her research was the first to track the relationship between PTSD, cannabis use and ā€œsevere mental health outcomesā€ among the average Canadian population, according to a .

Lake, a research assistant at the British Columbia Centre on Substance Use, said this was the first study examining how PTSDā€™s connection to suicidal thoughts or severe depression ā€œcould be interrupted by the use of cannabis.ā€

Her study also found one in four Canadians with PTSD said they used cannabis -- which is ā€œremarkably highā€ compared to the prevalence of pot use among the general Canadian population (which is an estimated 11.4 per cent).

STUDY DIDNā€™T SHOW CAUSAL LINK BETWEEN POT, PTSD RATES

Lake stressed her study didnā€™t outright show a definitive, causal link between cannabis use and decreased PTSD symptoms.

The PhD candidate at UBCā€™s School of Population and Public Health said the study ā€œdidnā€™t tell us whether people are successfully using cannabis to treat PTSD ā€¦ but it is a promising signal that there might be a therapeutic (benefit) to cannabis use.ā€

Of the 24,089 respondents to the 2012 Canadian Community Health Survey ā€“ Mental Health, 420 people had a clinical diagnosis of PTSD.

From those with PTSD, 106 of them -- 28 per cent -- said they used cannabis. This rate is nearly three times the rate of pot users without PTSD (11.2 per cent).

Lakeā€™s overall findings could be extremely helpful to many Canadians, as the study mentions that 9.2 per cent of Canadians have PTSD -- one of the highest prevalence rates for the disorder in the world.

HOW CANNABIS POTENTIALLY HELPED WITH PTSD

Lake explained that cannabinoid receptors in peopleā€™s bodies help regulate mood and sleep, and some research suggests that trauma from PTSD could compromise this endocannabinoid system.

ā€œSo when you introduce external cannabinoids (from pot products) to the body, it might help to get the system working as normal again,ā€ she suggested.

Lake also noted that, according to the study, PTSD patients did have cannabis-use disorders at a higher rate than the general population.

In a press release, senior author Dr. M-J Milloy, BCCSU research scientist and Canopy Growth Professor of Cannabis Science at UBC, said that ā€œweā€™re only just beginning to understand what the therapeutic potential of cannabis may be for a variety of health conditions.ā€

ā€œThese findings are promising, and merit further study in order to fully understand the benefits of cannabis for people living with PTSD,ā€ he added.

Lake added that UCB researchers are currently conducting a clinical trial looking at the effectiveness of cannabis products in specifically treating PTSD.