| Literature DB >> 30110903 |
Coral Gartner1,2, Marilyn Bromberg3, Tanya Musgrove4, Kathy Luong5.
Abstract
Vaporised nicotine products (VNPs) that are not approved as therapeutic goods are banned in some countries, including Australia, Singapore, and Thailand. We reviewed two non-profit regulatory options, private clubs and the Australian Therapeutic Goods Administration Special Access Scheme (SAS) that have been applied to other controlled substances (such as cannabis) as a potential model for regulating VNPs as an alternative to prohibition. The legal status of private cannabis clubs varies between the United States, Canada, Belgium, Spain, and Uruguay. Legal frameworks exist for cannabis clubs in some countries, but most operate in a legal grey area. Kava social clubs existed in the Northern Territory, Australia, until the federal government banned importation of kava. Access to medical cannabis in Australia is allowed as an unapproved therapeutic good via the SAS. In Australia, the SAS Category C appears to be the most feasible option to widen access to VNPs, but it may have limited acceptability to vapers and smokers. The private club model would require new legislation but could be potentially more acceptable if clubs were permitted to operate outside a medical framework. Consumer and regulator support for these models is currently unknown. Without similar restrictions applied to smoked tobacco products, these models may have only a limited impact on smoking prevalence. Further research could explore whether these models could be options for regulating smoked tobacco products.Entities:
Keywords: cannabis social club; e-cigarettes; kava; medical cannabis; nicotine; non-profit model; tobacco
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30110903 PMCID: PMC6121462 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph15081744
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Examples of the regulatory models (social club and special access scheme) for access to controlled substances (Cannabis and Kava).
| Model | Brief Description | Non-Profit | Legal Status | Registration/Documentation/Approvals Required | Restrictions | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age of Participant | Diagnoses | Quantity of Substance | |||||
| Cannabis Clubs: USA [ | Supported by membership fees/donations | √ | Illegal but tolerated, users who have a medical marijuana ID card typically will not be prosecuted | Medical marijuana ID card | State-dependent | State-dependent | State-dependent |
| Compassionate Cannabis Clubs: Canada [ | Places where people who are normally very ill and require medical marijuana can purchase safe marijuana | √ | The Canadian Federal Government passed the Cannabis Act which will come into force on 17 October 2018. This law legalises cannabis for recreational use. Until this Act comes into force, it is illegal to use cannabis for recreational use nationwide (except Vancouver and Victoria, BC). Some clubs outside these cities were raided. | License | Vancouver, BC: 19 years of age | Unknown | Unknown |
| Cannabis Social Club | Private clubs for the non-commercial distribution of cannabis | √ | Non-criminal but not legalised. Most follow ENCOD code of conduct | Registration as a not for profit association with National Registry of Organisations | 18 or 21+ years of age | Not required | 60–90 g per month |
| Cannabis Social Club: Belgium [ | Private clubs for the non-commercial distribution of cannabis | √ | Illegal but tolerated | Registration as a not for profit association with National Registry of Organisations | 18 or 21+ years of age | Required for CSCs operating solely for medical users, otherwise not required | 10–30 g per month |
| Cannabis Social Club: Uruguay [ | One of three legal ways for individuals to obtain cannabis | √ | Legal and regulated | Registration as a non-profit association with the registry and IRCCA | 18+ years of age | Accepted but not a requirement | 40 g per month |
| Australian Special Access Scheme for Medicinal Cannabis [ | Registered doctors with Australian Register of Therapeutic Goods apply on a case by case basis for patient to be able to import cannabis or else procure it through an Australian manufacturer | √ | Legal and regulated | Medical doctor must be registered and apply for their patient to access the cannabis. The patient will also need to apply for permission to the relevant authority in their State/Territory | Unknown | None | Determined by medical doctor |
| Kava: Northern Territory, Australia [ | Legal to possess a small amount of kava. Licences previously issued to sell kava by retail or wholesale (to licensed retailers) | Importation banned apart for medical and research purposes. | Can possess a specific quantity. Before importation ban, licences were issued to manufacture and sell kava. | 18 years of age | None | Possess less than two kilograms, or less than four kava plants (but not in drinkable form) | |
Laws covering cannabis in Australia, Canada, USA, Spain, Belgium and Uruguay and kava in Australia were identified by searching several legal and political databases (including LexisNexis AU, AGIS, Westlaw and the University of Western Australia’s search engine entitled Onesearch) with keywords including ‘cannabis’, ‘cannabis laws’, ‘marijuana laws’, ‘kava management act’ and ‘kava licensing’.
Benefits and limitations of social club and special access scheme models.
| Model | Benefits | Limitations |
|---|---|---|
| Not-for-profit social club | Provides legal access to VNPs for harm reduction | Would require new laws to ensure members are not prosecuted—risk of overly burdensome regulation |
| Approval to supply domestically as unapproved therapeutic good e.g., TGA Special Access Scheme (Category C) | Existing regulatory framework in some countries (Australia) | Maintains medical model which has low acceptability among vapers |
VNP Vaporised Nicotine Product.