| Literature DB >> 33530825 |
Jan van Amsterdam1, Gjalt-Jorn Ygram Peters2, Ed Pennings3, Tom Blickman4, Kaj Hollemans5, Joost J Jacobus Breeksema6, Johannes G Ramaekers7, Cees Maris8, Floor van Bakkum9, Ton Nabben10, Willem Scholten11, Tjibbe Reitsma12, Judith Noijen9, Raoul Koning9, Wim van den Brink1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Ecstasy (3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA)) has a relatively low harm and low dependence liability but is scheduled on List I of the Dutch Opium Act ('hard drugs'). Concerns surrounding increasing MDMA-related criminality coupled with the possibly inappropriate scheduling of MDMA initiated a debate to revise the current Dutch ecstasy policy.Entities:
Keywords: Ecstasy; MCDA; MDMA; XTC; adverse effects; criminality; risk assessment
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33530825 PMCID: PMC8155737 DOI: 10.1177/0269881120981380
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Psychopharmacol ISSN: 0269-8811 Impact factor: 4.153
Figure 1.The six steps of the multi-decision multi-criterion decision analysis. Wcl1 to Wcl6 represent the six cluster weight factors; W1 × Wcl1 (in Table 3 described as W1 × W2): 25 overall weight factors; Scn to Scn+1 are the scores for the policy options obtained in step 4; multiplication of the overall weight factor of the criterion with Scn gives the weighted option score. Summation of 22 weighted selected policy options gives the overall score (final score) of a constructed model.
Weighing factors (W1) of the six outcome clusters in the upper panel and the 25 outcome criteria with their mean weighing factor (W2) and their overall weighing factor (W1 × W2) in the lower panel.
| Cluster | Outcome cluster | W1 (as rated) | W1 (%) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| A | Use | 69 | 18 | |
| B | User health | 100 | 26 | |
| C | Crime | 89 | 24 | |
| D | Financial | 36 | 10 | |
| E | International | 25 | 7 | |
| F | Environmental damage (ethical consideration) | 58 | 15 | |
| Sum A–F | 100 | |||
| Nr. | Cluster | Outcome criterion (cluster item) | W2[ | Overall weight[ |
| 1 | A | Prevalence in the general population | 74 | 3.9 |
| 2 | A | Magnitude of use (frequency and dose) | 100 | 5.3 |
| 3 | A | Use by vulnerable groups | 96 | 5.1 |
| 4 | B | Health harms | 100 | 7.6 |
| 5 | B | Health benefits | 45 | 3.5 |
| 6 | B | Social harms | 69 | 5.3 |
| 7 | B | Social benefits | 47 | 3.6 |
| 8 | B | Shift to other (more harmful) drugs | 69 | 5.2 |
| 9 | B | Drug quality and use information | 91 | 7.0 |
| 10 | B | Stigmatisation of users | 72 | 5.5 |
| 11 | C | Criminalisation of users | 76 | 5.2 |
| 12 | C | Small crime | 33 | 2.2 |
| 13 | C | Organised crime related to MDMA | 100 | 6.8 |
| 14 | C | Organised crime not related to MDMA | 81 | 5.6 |
| 15 | C | International trafficking of MDMA | 65 | 4.4 |
| 16 | C | Targeting of vulnerable groups by organised crime | 80 | 5.5 |
| 17 | D | State revenue through VAT[ | 47 | 1.3 |
| 18 | D | State revenues through other taxes | 41 | 1.1 |
| 19 | D | Health costs | 100 | 2.8 |
| 20 | D | Crime costs | 87 | 2.4 |
| 21 | D | Costs due to environmental pollution | 73 | 2.0 |
| 22 | E | Damage to the Dutch Image | 51 | 1.0 |
| 23 | E | Damage due to international economic boycotts | 77 | 1.5 |
| 24 | E | Damage due to international legal counter measures | 100 | 1.9 |
| 25 | F | Environmental damage (ethical consideration) | 100 | 4.4 |
| Sum 1–25 | 100 | |||
As rated, but rescaled between 0 and 100.
Overall weight factor based on W2 × rescaled W1 (for details, see Methods).
In the EU, illegal goods, including illegal drugs, are not subject to VAT.
Description of the 95 policy instrument options sorted per policy instrument (n = 22). The 22 options with the description ‘not applicable’ (always scored as zero) are not included.
| Policy instruments | Policy instrument options | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Nr. | Name |
| Description |
| 1 | Possession | 4 | Tolerate user quantity, user quantity is legal and large possession tolerated, prohibit all or allow all |
| 2 | Packaging | 4 | Plain message, prevention message, both messages or no requirements |
| 3 | Advertising | 5 | Age-related advertising, advertising on the packaging, only business to business, prohibit all or allow all |
| 4 | Sales (companies) | 5 | Trade in ecstasy between companies: regulated, in analogy with commodity legislation, in analogy with pharmaceutical legislation, prohibit or allow |
| 5 | Sales (to users) | 5 | Sales of ecstasy to consumers: regulated, in analogy with commodity legislation, in analogy with pharmaceutical legislation, prohibit or allow |
| 6 | Age limit | 3 | For purchase and/or use of legalised ecstasy: none, 18 or >18 years |
| 7 | Penalisation | 3 | Sanctioning of consumer, seller or none of the two in case of violation of age limit |
| 8 | Legal requirements for selling | 2 | For sellers of legalised ecstasy: no criminal record and high drug education level or no requirements |
| 9 | Pricing policy | 2 | Pricing policy of legalised ecstasy: minimum price or no restrictions |
| 10 | Quality rules | 2 | To be set for ecstasy products: yes or no |
| 11 | Sanctioning QA rules[ | 3 | Sanctioning for violation of quality rules (none, light, heavy) |
| 12 | Monitoring | 3 | Level of monitoring product quality, prevalence and incidents: none, selective, regularly |
| 13 | Health education | 3 | Subsidising health education about ecstasy (not, minimally, largely) |
| 14 | Control prevention | 3 | Drug control primarily by the government (not, weak, strong) |
| 15 | Health information | 2 | Focus on abstinence or harm reduction |
| 16 | Type of government | 4 | National, regional, municipality or no governmental body is responsible for drug policy |
| 17 | Production | 5 | Production of MDMAb: regulated, in analogy with commodity legislation, in analogy with pharmaceutical legislation, prohibit or allow |
| 18 | Export | 2 | Legalise or not |
| 19 | International treaties | 6 | The Dutch position is an exceptional position, compliant, adjusted, tolerating, violating, inter se |
| 20 | Fighting crime | 3 | Prioritisation of fighting crime: low, selective for serious crime, high |
| 21 | Maximum penalty | 2 | Increase for illegal production and trafficking of MDMA or not |
| 22 | Confiscation | 2 | Increase efforts to seize profits gained through MDMA production and trading or not |
| Sum 1–22 | 73 | ||
QA: Quality assurance
MDMA: 3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine.
Preset anchor values of outcome criteria if different from −100 or +100 (12 of 25 outcomes).
| Nr. | Outcome | Maximal negative effect | Maximal positive effect |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2 | Magnitude of use (frequency and dose) | –100 | 50 |
| 3 | Use by vulnerable groups | –50 | 100 |
| 8 | Shift to other (more harmful) drugs | –100 | 25 |
| 11 | Criminalisation of users | –100 | 50 |
| 12 | Small crime | –100 | 50 |
| 15 | International trafficking of MDMA | –10 | 100 |
| 17 | State revenue through VAT | 0 | 100 |
| 18 | State revenues through other taxes | 0 | 100 |
| 19 | Health-related costs | –100 | 50 |
| 23 | Damage due to international economic boycotts | –100 | 0 |
| 24 | Damage due to international legal counter measures | –100 | 0 |
| 25 | Environmental damage (ethical consideration) | –40 | 100 |
The 22 policy instrument options that collectively lead to the optimal model (i.e. options giving the highest overall score for the 25 outcomes) and the improvement/deterioration compared to the current situation.
| Instrument | Best instrument option | Score[ |
|---|---|---|
| Legal requirements for selling | Only license holders may sell | 1611 |
| Monitoring | Extensive | 1538 |
| Quality rules | Quality requirements are laid down by law | 1412 |
| Production | Similar to pharmaceutical legislation | 1161 |
| Health education | The government largely subsidises | 1027 |
| Confiscation | More expertise and effort needed | 914 |
| Sanctioning QA rules | Violation is punished severely | 907 |
| Sales to users | Regulated | 896 |
| Sales between companies | Similar to pharmaceutical legislation | 881 |
| Punishable | Seller is punishable if not adhering to the age limit | 729 |
| Health information | Harm reduction | 609 |
| Packaging | ‘Plain packaging’ + prevention message | 520 |
| Pricing policy for sale to users | A legally determined minimum price | 435 |
| Age limit | No age limits | 290 |
| Advertising | All advertising is allowed | 203 |
| Priority crime fighting | Selective (high priority for serious MDMA-related crime, but low priority for that of consumers) | 88 |
| Export | Export is legalised | 48 |
| Maximum penalty | Increase current maximum penalty | 27 |
| International treaties | Inter se | 5 |
| Control prevention policy | Predominantly by prevention organisations | 0 |
| Which government[ | National and regional government | 0 |
| Possession | Tolerate user quantity | –29 |
| Sum | 13,270 | |
A positive/negative number indicates an improvement/deterioration compared to the current situation.
Responsible for prevention policy.
The final overall score of six policy models, the optimal model and the worst possible model compared to the current situation (set as zero). Worst score (minimum score) was −7252.
| Policy model | Overall score |
|---|---|
| Optimal (maximum score) | +13,270 |
| X-shop | +12,834 |
| Adapted coffee shop | +10,721 |
| Coffee shop | +5,528 |
| Free market | –2,244 |
| Repressive | –2,778 |
Figure 2.Effects of the optimal policy, consisting of the best-scoring policy instrument options, on the 25 outcomes.
Characteristics of the optimal model and the X-shop model.
Figure 3.Effect of six policy models on the six cluster outcomes. Highest possible scores refers to the optimal model.