Transcript Slide 1

Thinking about Burdens and Harms
Third Annual ACT Alcohol and Other Drugs Sector Conference
All Things Being Equal: Exploring the Burdens of Harm
Canberra, 24 June 2010
David McDonald
Visiting Fellow, National Centre for Epidemiology and Population Health,
The Australian National University
Consultant in Social Research & Evaluation
The drug availability/harm dilemma
(John Marks/Stephen Mugford)
Harm
High harm
Currently illegal
Currently
drugs
legal drugs
Optimal point
Low harm
Supply
Low availability
High availability
The assessment of harms is …
 Statistical
• e.g. incidence & costs of alcohol-related road crashes
Statistical data
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The assessment of harms is …
 Statistical
• e.g. incidence & costs of alcohol-related road crashes
 Social
• e.g. intoxication is acceptable in some social settings
 Normative (i.e. judgement of ‘what ought to be’)
• e.g. the death of police office, a drug trafficker or a
bystander in a shootout between police and the trafficker
Three key contemporary resources
 1. Babor, T et al. 2009, Drug policy and the public good,
Oxford University Press, Oxford.
2. Babor, T et al. 2010, Alcohol: no ordinary commodity –
research and public policy, 2nd edn, OUP, Oxford.
 3. National Preventative Health Taskforce,
Tobacco Working Group 2008,
Tobacco control in Australia: making smoking history,
Technical Report No 2, [Department of Health and Ageing],
Canberra (Michelle Scollo, writer).
Which harms?
 The public health perspective: morbidity, mortality
and disability
 The hidden harms: social harms
• Goldstein’s taxonomy of the links between drugs &
crime: economic (e.g. robbery), pharmacological
(inhibitions lifted), drug markets (violence), lifestyles
Social harms (cont.)
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Community amenity: public nuisance and disorder and vandalism
Violence
Family: divorce/marital problems, child abuse
Education problems
Individual & family financial problems
Workplaces: injuries and other problems
Loss of employment
Fiscal impacts
National instability – failed states
Global terrorism
Unintended adverse consequences of drug policies and interventions
Etcetera
The mechanisms through which
harms are caused
Source: Babor et al. 2009, p. 19.
Attempts to align policies to the relative harms of
different drugs
 International Conventions (treaties)
• E.g. Convention on Psychotropic Substances, 1971
Article 4. If the World Health Organization finds:
a) That the substance has the capacity to produce
i) 1) A state of dependence, and
2) Central nervous system stimulation or depression, resulting in hallucinations or
disturbances in motor function or thinking or behaviour or perception or mood, or
ii) Similar abuse and similar ill effects as a substance in Schedule I, II, III or IV, and
b) That there is sufficient evidence that the substance is being or is likely to be abused so
as to constitute a public health and social problem warranting the placing of the
substance under international control, the World Health Organization shall
communicate to the Commission an assessment of the substance, including the
extent or likelihood of abuse, the degree of seriousness of the public health and social
problem and the degree of usefulness of the substance in medical therapy, together
with recommendations on control measures, if any, that would be appropriate in the
light of its assessment.
‘A rational scale to assess the harm of
drugs of potential misuse’
Source: Nutt et al. 2007, pp. 1047-53.
Different harms in different population
groups
 For example low SES
• financial strain and smoking cessation outcomes
 Mental illness comorbidity
 Aboriginal people
• note confounders of poverty, access to services, mental
health
 Different distributions of risk factors and protective
factors in different population groups
Policy implications of assessing
harm potential
It is not just the chemical characteristics of the drugs
that determine harm, but also how drugs are used,
drug interactions, society’s responses to drugs and
people who use drugs, etc.
Nonetheless, harm potential should be prominent in
informing policy decision-making.
Studies of the Burden of Disease and
Injury
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Begg, S, Vos, T, Barker, B, Stevenson, C, Stanley, L & Lopez, AD 2007, The
burden of disease and injury in Australia 2003, AIHW, Canberra.
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Includes topline findings for each State & Territory, but not ATOD and other risk
factors – these are provided for Australia only
Vos, T, Barker, B, Stanley, L & Lopez, A 2007, The burden of disease and injury
in Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples 2003, School of Population
Health, The University of Queensland, Brisbane.
Begg, S, Bright, M & Harper, C 2009, Burden of disease and health adjusted life
expectancy in Health Service Districts of Queensland Health, 2006, Queensland
Health, Brisbane.
Zhao, Y, Guthridge, S, Magnus, A & Vos, T 2004, 'Burden of disease and injury in
Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal populations in the Northern Territory', Medical
Journal of Australia, vol. 180, no. 10, pp. 498-502.
VicHealth, Burden of Disease (BoD) - LGAs and regions 2001,
http://www.health.vic.gov.au/healthstatus/bod.
ATODs as risk factors for the BoD
Disability-Adjusted Life Years (DALYs) 2003
• Combine mortality, morbidity & disability
• Do not cover the ‘hidden harms’, i.e. social harms
 Tobacco, alcohol and illegal drugs: 12.1% of the total burden
• tobacco: 7.8% of the total burden of disease & injury
• alcohol: 2.3% in net terms
• illicit drugs: 2.0%
 ATOD only
• tobacco: 65% of the drug-related burden
• alcohol 19%
• illicit drugs 16%
 Not available for the ACT by risk factor
(Source: Begg et al. 2007 & presenter’s calculations)
Taxonomy of drug-related harms/costs
Type of
harms/costs,
e.g.
Who bears the
harms/costs
Sources of
harms/costs
Users, dealers, intimates,
employers, neighbourhood,
society, etc.
Drug use, legal status,
interventions, etc.
Health
Social & economic
functioning
Safety & public order
Criminal justice
system
Source: adapted from MacCoun & Reuter 2001.
Conclusion
 ‘Harm’ is a complex concept
 ‘Where we sit determines what we see’
 Thinking about the ACT’s drug-related burden of
harm
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The facts and figures on health & social harms
The community’s values and expectations
The sources of drug-related harms
Who in our community bears the drug-related harms
Sources and notes (1)
Babor, T et al. 2010, Alcohol: no ordinary commodity - research and public policy, 2nd edn, OUP, Oxford.
Babor, T et al. 2009, Drug policy and the public good, Oxford University Press, Oxford.
Bennett, T & Holloway, K 2009, 'The causal connection between drug misuse and crime', British Journal of Criminology, vol. 49, no. 4,
pp. 513-31.
Goldstein, PJ 1985, 'The drugs/violence nexus: a tripartite conceptual framework', Journal of social issues, vol. 15, no. 4, pp. 493-506.
Kendzor, DE et al. 2010, 'Financial strain and smoking cessation among racially/ethnically diverse smokers', American Journal of
Public Health, vol. 100, no. 4, pp. 702-6.
Kleiman, MAR 1992, Against excess: drug policy for results, Basic Books, New York, NY.
Kleiman, MAR 2009, When brute force fails: how to have less crime and less punishment, Princeton University Press, Princeton.
MacCoun, R, Reuter, P & Schelling, T 1996, 'Assessing alternative drug control regimes', Journal of Policy Analysis and Management,
vol. 15, no. 3, pp. 330-52.
MacCoun, R & Reuter, P 2001, Drug war heresies: learning from other vices, times, and places, Rand Studies in Policy Analysis,
Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK
McKie, J & Richardson, J 2003, 'The rule of rescue', Social Science and Medicine, vol. 56, no. 12, pp. 2407-19.
Mrazek, PJ & Haggerty, RJ (eds) 1994, Reducing risks for mental disorders: frontiers for prevention intervention research, National
Academy Press, Washington DC.
Mugford, S 1991, 'Drug legalization and the 'Goldilocks' problem: thinking about costs and control of drugs', in MB Krauss & EP
Lazear (eds), Searching for alternatives: drug-control policies in the United States, Hoover Institution Press, Stanford, Calif.
Mugford, S 1993, 'Harm reduction: does it lead where its proponents imagine?' in N Heather, A Wodak, EE Nadelmann & P O'Hare
(eds), Psychoactive drugs and harm reduction: from faith to science, Whurr, London.
National Preventative Health Taskforce, Tobacco Working Group 2009, Tobacco control in Australia: making smoking history,
Technical Report No 2, including addendum for October 2008 to June 2009, [Department of Health and Ageing], Canberra,
writer: Michelle Scollo.
Nutt, D, King, LA, Saulsbury, W & Blakemore, C 2007, 'Development of a rational scale to assess the harm of drugs of potential
misuse', The Lancet, vol. 369, no. 9566, pp. 1047-53.
Roche, AM 1997, 'The shifting sands of alcohol prevention: rethinking population control approaches', Australian and New Zealand
Journal of Public Health, vol. 21, no. 6, pp. 621-5 .
Rose, G 1981, 'Strategy of prevention: lessons from cardiovascular disease', British Medical Journal (Clinical Research Ed.), vol. 282,
no. 6279, pp. 1847-51.
Rose, G 1992, The Strategy of Preventive Medicine, OUP, Oxford.
David McDonald’s contact details
Director
Social Research & Evaluation Pty Ltd
1004 Norton Road, Wamboin NSW 2620
Phone: (02) 6238 3706
Mobile: 0416 231 890
Facsimile: (02) 9475 4274
Email:
[email protected]
Online: www.socialresearch.com.au
Visiting Fellow
National Centre for Epidemiology &
Population Health
The Australian National University
Canberra ACT 0200
Email: [email protected]