Discussion on relative drug harm Flashcards
How can you investigate relative drug harm
- PREVALENCE OF DRUG USE (UK)
- RANGE OF PHYSICAL HARM
- RANGE OF PSYCHOLOGICAL HARM
- RANGE OF SOCIAL HARM
Prevalence of use
Measured the extent and trends of drug use in a nationally representative sample of 16-59-year olds in England and Wales (18/19)
- Includes the extent and trends in drug use among adults, including separate analysis of young adults (between 16 and 24 years)
- Highlights the frequency of drug use in the last year
- Highlights drug use by personal, household and area characteristics and lifestyle factors
- Highlights the use of new psychoactive substances (NPS)
- Discusses the perceived ease of obtaining illegal drugs
- Found that 1/11, 16-59-year olds and 1/5, 16-24-year olds have reported using an illicit drug in the last year
- Also observed that the majority of ecstasy and powdered cocaine users only take the drug once/twice a year, whilst 34% of cannabis users are classed as frequent users
If we look specifically at the proportion of 16-59-year olds reporting use of selected drugs in the last years:
- Cannabis use higher among men (10.3%) than women (5%)
- Cocaine use higher among men (4%) than women (1.7%)
- Ecstasy use higher among men (2.1%) than women (1%)
RANGE OF PHYSICAL HARM
Drug-specific mortality
- Intrinsic lethality of the drug expressed as ratio of lethal dose and standard dose for adults
Drug-related mortality
- The extent to which life is shortened by the use of the drug e.g. road traffic accidents, lung cancers, HIV, suicide
Drug-specific damage
- Cirrhosis, seizures, strokes, cardiomyopathy, stomach ulcers
Drug-related damage
- Includes consequences such as sexual unwanted activities and self-harm, blood-borne viruses, emphysema and damage from cutting agents
Injury
- Extent to which the use of a drug increases the chance of injuries to others both directly and indirectly
- For example, violence, traffic accident, foetal harm, drug waste, secondary transmission of blood borne viruses
RANGE OF PSYCHOLOGICAL HARM
Dependence: the extent to which a drug creates a propensity or urge to continue to use despite adverse consequences
Drug specific impairment of mental functioning = amphetamine induced psychosis, ketamine intoxication
Drug-related impairment of mental functioning = mood disorders secondary to drug user’s lifestyle
RANGE OF SOCIAL HARM
Crime
- The extent to which the use of a drug involves/leads to an increase in volume of acquisitive crime, beyond the use of drug act
- At the population level this can be considered both directly and indirectly
Environmental damage
- Extent to which the use and production of a drug causes environmental damage locally = discarded needles, toxic waste from amphetamine factories
Family adversities
- Extent to which the use of a drug causes family adversities = family breakdown, economic wellbeing, emotional wellbeing, child neglect
International damage
- Extent to which the use of a drug in the UK contributes to damage internationally = deforestation, international crime, new markets, destabilisation of countries
Economic cost
- Extent to which the use of a drug causes direct costs to the country (health care, police, prisons) and indirect costs (loss of productivity)
Community
- Extent to which the use of a drug creates decline in social cohesion and reputation of the community
Loss of tangibles
- Extent of loss of tangible things = income, housing, jobs, educational achievements, criminal record, imprisonment
Loss of relationships
- Extent of loss of relationship with family and friends
All of the harms discussed can be divided into harm to self and harm to others
How is expert ranking used to assess drug harm
Analysis undertaken in 2010 by David Nutt (former government drug advisor) via a two-stage process:
- The UK Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs (ACMD) met in 2009 to determine drug harm criteria
- The Independent Scientific Committee on Drugs (ISCD) (a new organisation of drug experts independent of government interference) was convened in 2010 to develop a multicriteria decision analysis model
- MCDA model assessed scores for 20 representative drugs that are relevant to the UK and which spans the range of potential harms and extent of use
Using the results:
- A total of sixteen harm criteria were identified, with nine criteria related to the harms that a drug produces in the individual and seven to the harms to others (both in the UK and overseas)
- Harms were clustered into five subgroups representing physical, psychological and social harms
Total harm score for all the drugs and the part score contributions to the total from the sub-groups of harms to users and harms to others:
- Most harmful drugs to users were heroin (34), crack cocaine (37) and methamphetamine (32)
- Whereas the most harmful to others were alcohol (46), crack cocaine (17) and heroin (21)
- When two-part scores were combined, alcohol was the most harmful drug followed by heroin and crack cocaine
- Most harmful drug to others was alcohol by a wide margin
- Most harmful drug to users was crack cocaine followed closely by heroin
- Methamphetamine was the next most harmful to users, but it was of little comparative harm to alcohol, crack cocaine and heroin
- Alcohol with an overall score of 72 was judged to be most harmful, followed by heroin at 55 then crack cocaine with a score of 54
- Only eight drugs scored, overall, 20 points or more
Drug-specific mortality was a substantial contributor to five of the drugs (alcohol, heroin, GHB, methadone and butane), whereas economic cost contributed heavily to alcohol, heroin, tobacco and cannabis
These rankings led to David Nutt losing his position as the government’s drug advisor
Major criticism raised from using the expert ranking approach:
- The ranking depends too heavily on subjective personal criteria and not using purely scientific facts
- The methodology was criticised as it wasn’t normalised to the total number of users or the frequency of drug use = results could be biased/under-represent the harms of specific drugs
Major criticism raised from using the expert ranking approach:
-The ranking depends too heavily on subjective personal criteria and not using purely scientific facts
- The methodology was criticised as it wasn’t normalised to the total number of users or the frequency of drug use = results could be biased/under-represent the harms of specific drugs
APPROACHES USED TO ASSESS DRUG HARM:
TOXICOLOGY BASED INDICES
There are a number of toxicology-based indices that can be used to assess relative drug harm:
- Therapeutic index = the ratio of the median lethal dose (LD50) to the median effective dose (ED50) = this qualitative score provides a safety ratio
- UNODC Illicit Drug Index = a combination of a dose index (ratio between the typical dose and lethal dose) and a toxicology index (conc. levels in the blood of people who died from overdose compared with the conc. levels in persons who had been given the drug for therapeutic use)
- Ratio of number of deaths associated with a substance to its availability = availability can be determined by three separate measures: number of users as determined by household surveys, number of seizures by law enforcement agencies and estimates of the market size
APPROACHES USED TO ASSESS DRUG HARM: 3. MARGIN OF EXPOSURE (MOE)
Margin of exposure is a novel approach to compare the health risks of different compounds and to prioritise risk management actions
MOE is defined as the ratio between the toxicological threshold (benchmark dose) and the estimated human intake
Median lethal dose values from animal experiments were used to derive the benchmark dose
Analysis by Lachenmeier and Rehm (2015) showed daily drug use of a number of substances, estimated using probabilistic analysis:
- The lower the MOE, the larger the risk for humans
- Alcohol had the lowest MOE, followed by heroin and cocaine
- The rankings seen in this paper were broadly consistent with the previous expert rankings
APPROACHES USED TO ASSESS DRUG HARM: UK DRUG LEGISLATION
A number of psychoactive substances are part of a regulated drug market (alcohol, tobacco) through a variety of means including taxation, sales and age of purchase
However, a number of drugs are subject to control under the Misuse of Drugs Act 1971
- Was a means for controlling drugs (Class A-C)
- Grade penalties for drug possession and trafficking
- Temporary Controlled Drug Orders
- Advisory Council on Misuse of Drugs
There isn’t always a correlation between the harm of the substance and its classification (e.g. alcohol scored as most harmful but is not found in class A-C)
This could be the case because there are a number of external influences involved in the drug legislation process, not always just based on scientific evidence
- Pressure from the public
- Media attention
- Political input
- Lobby/pressure groups = reaction to high profile case
ANALYSIS OF DRUG LEGISLATION (is it working)
Before the Psychoactive Substances Act (2016) was introduced, chemists would get around the Misuse of Drugs Act in 1971 by synthesising a new drug with a slightly different chemical structure to make it unscheduled and therefore legal
This drug could then be sold legally until the government managed to get it into the controlled drugs category = then it becomes illegal
A new drug would then be synthesised, and the cycle continues
The Psychoactive Substances Act (2016) was mainly focused on demonstrating psychoactivity but doesn’t really focus on drug harm
There is limited data on the prevalence and harms of use in novel psychoactive substances
- In 2018-19, novel psychoactive substance use was highest between the 16-24 age category
- When looking at just the users of novel psychoactive substances = 26.6% were frequent users
Still remains to be seen whether the Psychoactive Substances Act (2016) really caused a decline in use or whether participants were just less likely to admit use as it had now become illegal
In terms of gathering scientific evidence on drug harm, it is an extremely challenging task as there is a constantly increasing number of novel psychoactive substances and only limited scientific evidence on relative drug harm
What is needed:
- A range of in vitro studies using cell lines
- Animal model studies = in vivo
- Human studies to measure acute and chronic effects