Canadian Institute for Substance Use Research, University of Victoria, Victoria, British Columbia, Canada.
Department of Psychology, University of Victoria, Victoria, British Columbia, Canada.
Health Promot Chronic Dis Prev Can. 2020 Jun;40(5-6):135-142. doi: 10.24095/hpcdp.40.5/6.01.
This special issue on substance use issues comes at a critical time for Canadian health policy makers and researchers. Most attention is currently focussed on the opioid crisis and the potential impacts of cannabis legalization. However, our most widely used and harmful substances continue to be alcohol and nicotine. Our policies to reduce harms from these substances are failing. While alcohol control policies are being gradually abandoned, opportunities to maximize the harm reduction potential of new, alternative and safer nicotine delivery devices are not being grasped. More generally, a greater focus is needed on harm reduction strategies that are informed by the experience of marginalized people with severe substance use-related problems so as to not exacerbate health inequities. In order to better inform policy responses, we recommend innovative approaches to monitoring and surveillance that maximize the use of multiple data sources, such as those used in the Canadian Substance Use Costs and Harms (CSUCH) project. Greater attention to precision in defining patterns of risky use and harms is also needed to support policies that more accurately reflect and respond to actual levels of substance use-related harm in Canadian society.
本期关于物质使用问题的特刊正值加拿大卫生政策制定者和研究人员的关键时刻。目前,大多数注意力都集中在阿片类药物危机和大麻合法化的潜在影响上。然而,我们使用最广泛且危害最大的物质仍然是酒精和尼古丁。我们减少这些物质危害的政策正在失败。虽然正在逐步放弃酒精控制政策,但未能抓住利用新的、替代的和更安全的尼古丁输送装置来最大程度地减少危害的机会。更广泛地说,需要更加关注由严重物质使用相关问题的边缘化人群的经验所启发的减少伤害策略,以免加剧健康不平等。为了更好地为政策应对提供信息,我们建议采用创新的监测和监督方法,最大限度地利用多种数据源,例如在加拿大物质使用成本和危害(CSUCH)项目中使用的数据源。还需要更加关注准确界定危险使用和危害模式,以支持更准确地反映和应对加拿大社会中与物质使用相关的实际危害水平的政策。