-
The concept of ‘drug harms’
Peter CohenDrugs and Alcohol Today
December 2010
In my view, perceived harms associated with drugs are vulnerable to so many restrictions on reliability and validity that, for the time being, a serious estimate of drug harm per drug is impossible. In my view, it is even invalid to associate harms to drugs alone. Drugs are used by humans, under individual, social and legal conditions, in certain purities and dosages. Whatever the 'effects' of drugs, harmful or not, they cannot be estimated or even discussed without associating the drug with a particular user or user culture. Drugs per se do not meaningfully exist.
Leer más...
Download the document (PDF) -
El alcohol causa más estragos en la sociedad que las drogas ilegales
Un estudio británico clasifica las sustancias por su impacto en el entorno del adicto - Heroína y 'crack', más dañinas para la salud
El País (España)
martes, 2 de noviembre, 2010La última palabra sobre drogas no está dicha. La única clasificación cierta y casi universal es la que las divide entre sustancias legales e ilegales. Y cada vez hay más expertos que ponen en entredicho esta división. Uno de ellos es David Nutt, ex miembro del grupo asesor sobre estupefacientes del Gobierno británico (fue despedido en octubre de 2009 tras defender sin éxito revisar la clasificación del cannabis). Y su último trabajo, que ha publicado en The Lancet, está destinado a levantar polémica. En él afirma que el alcohol es la droga más dañina, por delante de la heroína y el crack (una forma muy poco elaborada de la cocaína), si se tiene en cuenta su efecto social, en especial sobre el entorno del usuario, además del daño a la salud.
-
Drug harms in the UK
A multicriteria decision analysis
David J Nutt, Leslie A King, Lawrence D Phillips, on behalf of the Independent Scientific Committee on DrugsThe Lancet
November 1, 2010
To provide better guidance to policy makers in health, policing, and social care, the harms that drugs cause need to be properly assessed. This task is not easy because of the wide range of ways in which drugs can cause harm. This study undertook a review of drug harms with the multicriteria decision analysis (MCDA) approach. This technology has been used successfully to lend support to decision makers facing complex issues characterised by many, conflicting objectives.
Leer más...
Download the document (PDF) -
Politics and science in classifying the dangers of drugs
Robin Room & Dan I. LubmanEvidence Based Mental Health
November 2010
There is a long history of psychoactive substances being regarded as dangerous and subsequently being banned or forbidden. Often the bans were introduced on substances new and unfamiliar to a society, which were viewed as more dangerous than substances which were well known and enculturated. With industrialisation and the globalisation brought by European empires, the growing availability of psychoactive substances was increasingly seen as a problem in the 1800s, setting off social and policy reactions – what we know as the temperance movement against alcohol,
and initial UK legislation limiting the sale of ‘poisons’.
Leer más...
Download the article (PDF) -
Orientaciones para el examen por la OMS de sustancias psicoactivas en el contexto de la fiscalización internacional
Organización Mundila de la Salud EB126/21
17 de diciembre de 2009
Leer más...
Tanto en la Convención Única sobre Estupefacientes, de 1961, como en el Convenio sobre Sustancias Sicotrópicas, de 1971, se encomienda al del Comité de Expertos en Farmacodependencia de la Organización Mundila de la Salud (OMS) la función de evaluar sustancias para determinar su posible uso indebido a fin de formular recomendaciones sobre su fiscalización en el marco de esos tratados de las Naciones Unidas. -
TNI Expert Seminar on the Classification of Controlled Substances
Transnational Institute
Amsterdam
December 10, 2009
The classification of drugs has a profound impact on the lives and well-being of individuals across the world and where the classification is incorrect, people suffer unnecessarily. This is an issue that deserves greater public awareness and greater engagement with citizenry and that where such public awareness is in place it should be galvanised in order to work towards a new democratic answer to this difficult situation.
Leer más...
Download the report (PDF)
-
Estimating drug harms: a risky business?
David NuttCentre for Crime and Justice Studies Briefing 10
October 2009
No one is suggesting that drugs are not harmful. The critical question is one of scale and degree. We need a full and open discussion of the evidence and a mature debate about what the drug laws are for - and whether they doing their job? In `Estimating drug harms: a risky business', Professor David Nutt, of Imperial College London argues that the relative harms of legal drugs such as alcohol and tobacco are greater than those of a number of illegal drugs, including cannabis, LSD and ecstasy.
Leer más...
Download the document (PDF) -
Risk assessment of new psychoactive substances
Operating guidelines
European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction (EMCDDA)
2009
The principal aim of these guidelines is to put in place a sound methodological and procedural basis for carrying out each risk assessment. The risk assessment has regard to the health and social risks of the use of, manufacture of, and traffic in the new psychoactive substance, the involvement of organised crime and the possible consequences of control measures. The guidelines were finalised and adopted by the EMCDDA’s Scientific Committee in November 2008. -
Cannabis: Classification and Public Health
Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs
April 2008
The Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs reviewed the classification of cannabis in the light of real public concern about the potential mental health effects of cannabis use and, in particular, the use of stronger strains of the drug.
Leer más...
Download the document (PDF) -
MDMA (‘ecstasy’)
A review of its harms and classification under the Misuse of Drugs Act 1971
Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs
February 2008
Due to its prevalence of use, MDMA is a significant public health issue. The Council believes that criminal justice measures will only have limited effect and strongly advises the promulgation of public health messages. It is of vital importance that issues of classification do not detract from messages concerning public health.
Download the document (PDF)




