Sevigny Eric L, Greathouse Jared, Medhin Danye N
Department of Criminal Justice and Criminology Georgia State University Atlanta Georgia USA.
Campbell Syst Rev. 2023 Oct 30;19(4):e1362. doi: 10.1002/cl2.1362. eCollection 2023 Dec.
Globally, cannabis laws and regulations are rapidly changing. Countries are increasingly permitting access to cannabis under various decriminalization, medicalization, and legalization laws. With strong economic, public health, and social justice incentives driving these domestic cannabis policy reforms, liberalization trends are bound to continue. However, despite a large and growing body of interdisciplinary research addressing the policy-relevant health, safety, and socioeconomic consequences of cannabis liberalization, there is a lack of robust primary and systematic research that comprehensively investigates the consequences of these reforms.
This evidence and gap map (EGM) summarizes the empirical evidence on cannabis liberalization policies. Primary objectives were to develop a conceptual framework linking cannabis liberalization policies to relevant outcomes, descriptively summarize the empirical evidence, and identify areas of evidence concentration and gaps.
We comprehensively searched for eligible English-language empirical studies published across 23 academic databases and 11 gray literature sources through August 2020. Additions to the pool of potentially eligible studies from supplemental sources were made through November 2020.
The conceptual framework for this EGM draws upon a legal epidemiological perspective highlighting the causal effects of law and policy on population-level outcomes. Eligible interventions include policies that create or expand access to a legal or decriminalized supply of cannabis: comprehensive medical cannabis laws (MCLs), limited medical cannabidiol laws (CBDLs), recreational cannabis laws (RCLs), industrial hemp laws (IHLs), and decriminalization of cultivations laws (DCLs). Eligible outcomes include intermediate responses (i.e., attitudes/behaviors and markets/environments) and longer-term consequences (health, safety, and socioeconomic outcomes) of these laws.
Both dual screening and dual data extraction were performed with third person deconfliction. Primary studies were appraised using the Maryland Scientific Methods Scale and systematic reviews were assessed using AMSTAR 2.
The EGM includes 447 studies, comprising 438 primary studies and nine systematic reviews. Most research derives from the United States, with little research from other countries. By far, most cannabis liberalization research focuses on the effects of MCLs and RCLs. Studies targeting other laws-including CBDLs, IHLs, and DCLs-are relatively rare. Of the 113 distinct outcomes we documented, cannabis use was the single most frequently investigated. More than half these outcomes were addressed by three or fewer studies, highlighting substantial evidence gaps in the literature. The systematic evidence base is relatively small, comprising just seven completed reviews on cannabis use (3), opioid-related harms (3), and alcohol-related outcomes (1). Moreover, we have limited confidence in the reviews, as five were appraised as minimal quality and two as low quality.
AUTHORS’ CONCLUSIONS: More primary and systematic research is needed to better understand the effects of cannabis liberalization laws on longer-term-and arguably more salient-health, safety, and socioeconomic outcomes. Since most research concerns MCLs and RCLs, there is a critical need for research on the societal impacts of industrial hemp production, medical CBD products, and decriminalized cannabis cultivation. Future research should also prioritize understanding the heterogeneous effects of these laws given differences in specific provisions and implementation across jurisdictions.
在全球范围内,大麻法律法规正在迅速变化。各国越来越多地根据各种非刑事化、医疗化和合法化法律允许获取大麻。在强大的经济、公共卫生和社会正义激励措施推动这些国内大麻政策改革的情况下,自由化趋势势必会持续下去。然而,尽管有大量且不断增加的跨学科研究探讨了大麻自由化在政策方面相关的健康、安全和社会经济后果,但仍缺乏全面调查这些改革后果的有力的基础研究和系统研究。
本证据与差距图谱(EGM)总结了关于大麻自由化政策的实证证据。主要目标是建立一个将大麻自由化政策与相关结果联系起来的概念框架,描述性地总结实证证据,并确定证据集中的领域和差距。
我们全面检索了截至2020年8月在23个学术数据库和11个灰色文献来源中发表的符合条件的英文实证研究。通过2020年11月补充来源增加了潜在符合条件研究的库。
本EGM的概念框架借鉴了法律流行病学的观点,强调法律和政策对人群层面结果的因果影响。符合条件的干预措施包括创造或扩大合法或非刑事化大麻供应渠道的政策:全面的医用大麻法律(MCLs)、有限的医用大麻二酚法律(CBDLs)、娱乐用大麻法律(RCLs)、工业大麻法律(IHLs)以及种植非刑事化法律(DCLs)。符合条件的结果包括这些法律的中间反应(即态度/行为和市场/环境)以及长期后果(健康、安全和社会经济结果)。
采用双人筛选和双人数据提取,并由第三人进行冲突协调。使用马里兰科学方法量表对基础研究进行评估,使用AMSTAR 2对系统评价进行评估。
该EGM包括447项研究,其中438项基础研究和9项系统评价。大多数研究来自美国,其他国家的研究很少。到目前为止,大多数大麻自由化研究集中在MCLs和RCLs的影响上。针对其他法律(包括CBDLs、IHLs和DCLs)的研究相对较少。在我们记录的113个不同结果中,大麻使用是最常被研究的单一结果。超过一半的这些结果仅有三项或更少的研究涉及,这突出了文献中存在大量证据空白。系统证据基础相对较小,仅包括七项已完成的关于大麻使用(3项)、阿片类药物相关危害(3项)和酒精相关结果(1项)的综述。此外,我们对这些综述的信心有限,因为五项被评估为质量极低,两项为低质量。
需要更多的基础研究和系统研究,以更好地理解大麻自由化法律对长期(且可以说更显著)的健康、安全和社会经济结果的影响。由于大多数研究关注MCLs和RCLs,因此迫切需要对工业大麻生产、医用CBD产品和非刑事化大麻种植的社会影响进行研究。未来的研究还应优先了解这些法律在不同司法管辖区特定条款和实施方面存在差异的情况下所产生的异质性影响。