UK Study: Alcohol, Tobacco More Harmful Than Street Drugs
UK Study: Alcohol, Tobacco More Harmful Than Street Drugs
LONDON (AP) â New âlandmarkâ research finds that alcohol and tobacco are more dangerous than some illegal drugs like marijuana or Ecstasy and should be classified as such in legal systems, according to a new British study.
In research published recently in The Lancet magazine, Professor David Nutt of Britainâs Bristol University and colleagues proposed a new framework for the classification of harmful substances, based on the actual risks posed to society. Their ranking listed alcohol and tobacco among the top ten most dangerous substances.
Professor Nutt and colleagues used three factors to determine the harm associated with any drug: the physical harm to the user, the drugâs potential for addiction, and the impact on society of drug use. The researchers asked two groups of experts â psychiatrists specializing in addiction, and legal or police officials with scientific or medical expertise â to assign scores to 20 different drugs, including heroin, cocaine, Ecstasy, amphetamines, and LSD.
The professor and his colleagues then calculated the drugsâ overall rankings. In the end, the experts agreed with each other â but not with the existing British classification of dangerous substances.
Heroin and cocaine were ranked most dangerous, followed by barbiturates and street methadone. Alcohol was the fifth-most harmful drug and tobacco the ninth most harmful. Cannabis came in 11th, and near the bottom of the list was Ecstasy.
According to existing British and US drug policy, alcohol and tobacco are legal, while cannabis and Ecstasy are both illegal. Previous reports, including a study from a parliamentary committee last year, have questioned the scientific rationale for Britainâs drug classification system.
âThe current drug system is ill thought-out and arbitrary,â said Professor Nutt, referring to the United Kingdomâs practice of assigning drugs to three distinct divisions, ostensibly based on the drugsâ potential for harm. âThe exclusion of alcohol and tobacco from the Misuse of Drugs Act is, from a scientific perspective, arbitrary,â the professor wrote in The Lancet.
Tobacco causes 40 percent of all hospital illnesses, while alcohol is blamed for more than half of all visits to hospital emergency rooms. The substances also harm society in other ways, damaging families and occupying police services.
Professor Nutt hopes that the research will provoke debate within the UK and beyond about how drugs â including socially acceptable drugs such as alcohol â should be regulated. While different countries use different markers to classify dangerous drugs, none use a system like the one proposed by the UK study, which he hopes could serve as a framework for international authorities.
âThis is a landmark paper,â said Dr Leslie Iversen, professor of pharmacology at Oxford University. Dr Iversen was not connected to the research. âIt is the first real step toward an evidence-based classification of drugs.â He added that based on the paperâs results, alcohol and tobacco could not reasonably be excluded.
âThe rankings also suggest the need for better regulation of the more harmful drugs that are currently legal, i.e., tobacco and alcohol,â wrote Wayne Hall, of the University of Queensland in Brisbane, Australia, in an accompanying Lancet commentary. Mr Hall was not involved with Professor Nuttâs paper.
While experts agreed that criminalizing alcohol and tobacco would be challenging, they said that governments should review the penalties imposed for drug abuse and try to make them more reflective of the actual risks and damages involved.
Professor Nutt called for more education so that people were aware of the risks of various drugs. âAll drugs are dangerous,â he said. âEven the ones people know and love and use every day.â
