Chris Wilkins, Professor of Policy and Health, Te Kunenga ki Purehuroa – Massey University, Jose S. Romeo, Senior Research Officer and Statistician, Te Kunenga ki Purehuroa – Massey University, Marta Rychert, Associate Professor in Drug Policy and Health
New Zealand’s mainstay drug law turned 50 this year – yet we still don’t have a clear, comprehensive picture of the social harms different drugs pose.
When the Misuse of Drugs Act was introduced in 1975, it codified a set of prohibitions shaped not only by evidence of social harm, but also by the politics and anxieties of the time.
Drug bans have historically reflected a mix of genuine harms, moral panic, political expediency, prevailing attitudes, prejudice against minority groups and industry influence.
More recently, scheduling decisions have been influenced by media coverage, public concern, piecemeal social statistics and the views of academics and agencies.
A common proxy for judging a drug’s harm is the extent to which it is linked to dependency.
Several self-reported screening tools are used to assess dependency – but these typically bring a psychological framing to an issue that we know is multi-dimensional, with societal impacts that reach beyond the drug user.
Some progress has been made in developing broader harm rankings for different substances, but such assessments rely on small, select panels with narrowly focused expertise.
While there are a handful of social harm indexes of drug use, these also come with significant gaps.
To help address such limitations, we developed the Substance Outcome Harm Index (SO_HI) which is grounded in the idea that people who use drugs can offer valuable, experience-based insight.
Although its methodology is still being developed, our early findings provide new insights that challenge common beliefs about drug use and harm.
What our new index revealed
Our SO_HI index draws on data from more than 4,800 anonymous respondents to the 2025 New Zealand Drug Trends Survey, whose large sample broadly mirrors the wider population.
Respondents were first asked whether, in the past six months, they had experienced harm from alcohol or drug use in any of 12 identified life “dimensions”. These range from physical and mental health to relationships, personal safety, work/study performance, parenting and care giving, violence and money.
The harms described are largely acute problems to make it easier for substance users to link them to their recent alcohol and drug use. Some substances, such as tobacco, are also responsible for long term chronic illnesses and these harms are not well captured in our index.
For each area where harm was reported, respondents were shown short descriptions of four escalating levels of seriousness and asked to choose the highest they had experienced.
Interestingly, nearly two thirds of respondents (63.1%) did not report any negative outcomes from drug use across any of the dimensions.
The drug-related problems most commonly reported were mental health issues (19.0%), money problems (18.2%), physical health impacts (14.6%), and relationship difficulties (14.3%).
Fewer participants reported work or study problems (10.5%), unsafe driving (6.7%), or personal safety concerns (6.7%). Only a small proportion (3.1%) reported legal issues linked to their substance use.
When asked which substances were responsible, 60% of respondents identified a single drug (59.7%), a quarter identified two (26.3%), and around 9% identified three.
On our index, heroin/morphine, methamphetamine and GHB/GBL (also known as fantasy, liquid ecstasy or G) carried the highest cumulative mean harm scores across the 12 dimensions.
At the other end of the scale, LSD had the lowest harm mean score, followed by cocaine and MDMA (ecstasy) – with the latter scoring only a fraction of methamphetamine’s harm level.
These scores reflect the current patterns of use in New Zealand and will differ across countries depending on prevalence, price and availability.
For example, cocaine’s low score likely reflects the low availability and low frequency of use in New Zealand. In our sample, 71% of cocaine users had used it only once or twice in the past six months and 21% used it monthly.
Alcohol ranked sixth in our index, behind heroin, methamphetamine and GHB.
This differs from some published international rankings that place alcohol at the top. However, our index measures individual risk of harm, not total societal harm, which would account for prevalence of use.
Some harm assessments were also based on relatively small numbers of respondents naming a drug as responsible for harm.
Where our research goes next
Our preliminary findings illustrate the value of engaging with drug users to assess and compare the risk of harm of different drug types to inform policy response and health service resourcing.
The risk-of-harm scores can also be broken down for demographic groups that may be more vulnerable to drug harm – such as young people or those with mental health issues – and for ethnicities often poorly served by health services, including Maori and Pacific peoples.
Our questions could also be posed to specific groups, such as heroin users, to improve estimates for substances that are rarely used.
We are now developing a method for weighting different harm attributes and severity levels. For instance, some people may consider harms related to parenting more serious than those related to property crime or poor work performance.
We are also validating our findings against other harm measures and assessment tools, and further refinement will be coming.
There is a need to account for harm related to poly-drug use, given that 40% of our sample named more than one substance as responsible for their problems.
Applying our index in other countries, where drug availability and patterns of problematic use differ, will also be important for enabling robust international comparisons.
Chris Wilkins receives funding from the New Zealand Royal Society Te Aparangi Marsden Fund Grant MAU1812 and Health Research Council of New Zealand Grants HRC22/245 and 23/244
Marta Rychert receives salary support through the Rutherford Discovery Fellowship administered by the New Zealand Royal Society Te Aparangi and research grant funding from the NZ Health Research Council and the NZ Royal Society Te Aparangi Marsden Fund.
Jose S. Romeo and Robin van der Sanden do not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and have disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.