Home > The New Zealand drug harms ranking study: a multi-criteria decision analysis.

Crossin, Rose and Cleland, Lana and Wilkins, Chris and Rychert, Marta and Adamson, Simon and Potiki, Tuari and Pomerleau, Adam C and MacDonald, Blair and Faletanoai, Dwaine and Hutton, Fiona and Noller, Geoff and Lambie, Ian and Sheridan, Jane L and George, Jason and Mercier, Kali and Maynard, Kristen and Leonard, Louise and Walsh, Patricia and Ponton, Rhys and Bagshaw, Sue and Muthukumaraswamy, Suresh and McIntosh, Tracey and Poot, Edward and Gordon, Paul and Sharry, Patrick and Nutt, David and Boden, Joseph (2023) The New Zealand drug harms ranking study: a multi-criteria decision analysis. Journal of Psychopharmacology, 37, (9), pp. 891-903. doi: 10.1177/02698811231182012.

External website: https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/0269...

AIMS: The harms arising from psychoactive drug use are complex, and harm reduction strategies should be informed by a detailed understanding of the extent and nature of that harm. Drug harm is also context specific, and so any comprehensive assessment of drug harm should be relevant to the characteristics of the population in question. This study aimed to evaluate and rank drug harms within Aotearoa New Zealand using a multi-criteria decision analysis (MCDA) framework, and to separately consider harm within the total population, and among youth.

METHODS: Two facilitated workshops involved the separate ranking of harm for the total population, and then for youth aged 12-17, by two expert panels. In the total population workshop, 23 drugs were scored against 17 harm criteria, and those criteria were then evaluated using a swing weighting process. Scoring and weighting were subsequently updated during the youth-specific workshop. All results were recorded and analysed using specialised MCDA software.

RESULTS: When considering overall harm, the MCDA modelling results indicated that alcohol, methamphetamine and synthetic cannabinoids were the most harmful to both the overall population and the youth, followed by tobacco in the total population. Alcohol remained the most harmful drug for the total population when separately considering harm to those who use it, and harm to others.

CONCLUSIONS: The results provide detailed and context-specific insight into the harm associated with psychoactive drugs use within Aotearoa New Zealand. The findings also demonstrate the value of separately considering harm for different countries, and for different population subgroups.


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