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Research Program to Survey Behaviors of Cannabis and Substance use in the Thai Population, the Impact of Cannabis on Health Equity and Cost of Illness

รัศมน กัลยาศิริ; Rasmon Kalayasiri; สุริยัน บุญแท้; Suriyan Boonthae; เกื้อการุณย์ ครูส่ง; Kuakarun Krusong; ภัททา เกิดเรือง; Phatta Kirdruang; ศยามล เจริญรัตน์; Sayamol Charoenratana;
Date: 2567-10-09
Abstract
The removal of cannabis plants from the list of Category 5 narcotic drugs in 2022, which included permission to grow, sell, and use cannabis beyond medical purposes, necessitates close and continuous monitoring of the number of users and health impacts, particularly the health costs arising from cannabis-related illnesses in the Thai population. This includes surveying shops that sell cannabis and cannabis products available for consumption nationwide. This study was conducted as a project series, partly using data from the Centre for Addiction Studies (CADS), which conducted a survey on the attitudes and behaviors of drug use among Thais aged 18-65 years in 20-30 provinces across all regions of the country. It was found that the prevalence of recreational cannabis users in the past 12 months has significantly increased, especially in 2022, with a proportion as high as 24.9%, an increase of 487% compared to the previous year. The proportion of medical cannabis users, although increasing, was still only 2.59% in 2023, with a growth rate of 109% and 122% in 2022 and 2023, respectively. An analysis of the estimated total cost of illnesses, including both outpatient and inpatient cases and indirect costs from lost work opportunities of patients with psychiatric disorders due to cannabis use (F12), assuming that the proportion of patients with psychiatric disorders from cannabis use is 8%, found that the total costs were not more than 2 billion baht per year from 2019-2021. However, this sharply increased in 2022 to a value as high as 10.222 billion baht, with inpatient medical treatment costs, outpatient medical treatment costs, and indirect costs being 6.736 billion baht, 749 million baht, and 2.736 billion baht, respectively. Additionally, a supply-side survey examining cannabis beverages, which are easily accessible products, by testing the levels of delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol (∆9-THC) found that out of 207 samples nationwide, 42.51% contained ∆9-THC, and six samples had more than 1.6 mg per glass, which could affect consumer health. A study of shops in Silom Road and Khao San Road areas revealed that cannabis retail shops are located in commercial areas, visible and near entertainment venues. The shops are categorized into four types: large shops, medium shops, standalone shops, and stalls. The size of the shop affects the cannabis sales practices, price, and quality. However, legal compliance in each shop, such as safety standards, prevention of youth access, types of cannabis products sold, promotional activities, shop condition, and location, was only partially followed. The health equity impact assessment on vulnerable groups found more negative than positive impacts. In summary, the policy change to allow easier access to cannabis use in 2022 led to a sharp increase in cannabis users, patients, and costs associated with cannabis-related psychiatric illnesses. Even though this study did not consider the long-term mental health costs of cannabis addiction, tracking patients over time could lead to more accurate cost calculations. Moreover, some cannabis products have active ingredient levels above recommended limits, and shops only partially comply with legal guidelines. Therefore, it is proposed to issue ministerial regulations to bring cannabis plants under narcotic control laws again, aligning with the survey results where the majority of the Thai population supports the idea of reclassifying cannabis as a narcotic, allowing its use only for medical purposes to reduce health impacts and costs. Further measures to restrict its use to medical purposes can be developed, such as zoning, license restrictions, shop supervision, and legal penalties.
Copyright ผลงานวิชาการเหล่านี้เป็นลิขสิทธิ์ของสถาบันวิจัยระบบสาธารณสุข หากมีการนำไปใช้อ้างอิง โปรดอ้างถึงสถาบันวิจัยระบบสาธารณสุข ในฐานะเจ้าของลิขสิทธิ์ตามพระราชบัญญัติสงวนลิขสิทธิ์สำหรับการนำงานวิจัยไปใช้ประโยชน์ในเชิงพาณิชย์
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