Ketelaars, Daniëlle T P and Karl, Alexandra J and Luijten, Maartje and Vink, Jacqueline M and Dijkstra, Boukje A G (2026) 3 × 3 model for drug use normalisation: insights from a scoping review. International Journal of Drug Policy, 152, 105251. DOI: 10.1016/j.drugpo.2026.105251.
External website: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41921387/
BACKGROUND: Drug use normalisation has been conceptualised through diverse terminologies and conceptual approaches. While early studies provided only a partial perspective, more recent research has adopted increasingly comprehensive and nuanced approaches. Despite these conceptual advancements, a unified and contemporary definition with clearly operationalised measures remains lacking.
OBJECTIVE: This scoping review investigates how drug use normalisation is defined and measured in the literature, to inform the development of a model assessing drug use normalisation.
METHOD: A systematic search was conducted across MEDLINE, PsycINFO, Embase, Web of Science, and grey literature sources for studies that focused on the normalisation of recreational illicit drugs, published from 1994 to 2024. Screening and selection followed a predefined data extraction protocol, capturing definitions and criteria. Data were analysed thematically.
RESULTS: From 40 studies, 32 codes were identified and grouped into 10 themes across five conceptual categories: (1) Multi-Level Process, (2) Differentiated Normalisation, (3) Access and Policy, (4) Drug Use, and (5) Legitimacy. These categories constitute the foundation of a proposed 3 × 3 model, which defines drug use normalisation as a dynamic, multidimensional, and context-dependent process whereby recreational illicit drug use becomes increasingly accessible, prevalent, and perceived as legitimate across macro (societal), meso (contextual), and micro (individual) levels.
CONCLUSION: The proposed model provides a comprehensive operationalisation that captures all dimensions and levels of the concept drug use normalisation. The model has the potential to improve conceptual clarity, support more consistent measurement, and inform future research, monitoring, prevention, and policymaking.
A Substance use and dependence > Personal history of substance use (pathway)
B Substances > Substances in general
F Concepts in psychology > Attitude > Attitude toward substance use
L Social psychology and related concepts > Availability, accessibility, and supply
L Social psychology and related concepts > Legal availability or accessibility
MA-ML Social science, culture and community > Sociocultural aspects of substance use > Recreational drug use
T Demographic characteristics > Person who uses substances (user / experience)
VA Geographic area > International
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