Pubdate: Thu, 28 Jun 2001
Source: Guardian, The (UK)
Copyright: 2001 Guardian Newspapers Limited
Contact:  http://www.guardian.co.uk/guardian/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/175
Author: Esther Addley

THE CASE OF THE MISSING PILLS

Saturday night, and two boys from different parts of the country were 
getting ready for a evening on the town. It was going to be a big night; 
Stephen Brett, 19, had travelled from Surrey, while 20-year-old Bret Gilkes 
had come down from Birmingham, both excited about attending the Raindance 
party at the SE1 nightclub under London Bridge. A group of teenagers from 
north London turned up en masse, celebrating the end of their A-levels. 
Others came from Croydon and Coulsden.

At some point in the evening, Brett and Gilkes each took a white pill, 1cm 
in diameter, embossed with a five-pronged crown.

It was a hot night, and the party was packed, with sweat dripping down the 
walls. Outside, a number of people were having real problems, going into 
convulsions and pulling off clothing to cool down. By the end of the 
evening, seven people had been rushed to hospital.

By Tuesday Brett and Gilkes were dead.

Police have not yet confirmed the exact cause of death of the two men, but 
they know both had taken ecstasy - a "bad batch" of the drug appeared to be 
to blame, they said, mixed with a contaminant that may have been the rat 
poison strychnine.

Ecstasy deaths are more than the desperate tragedies they represent for the 
families involved - those who have died for the sake of a pill briefly 
enter the national consciousness.

While very many fewer people die from ecstasy use than from other 
controlled drugs, these are the deaths that linger: bright, beautiful young 
people, killed for the sake of a good evening out. It makes information 
about ecstasy use highly politically charged, and the search for something 
to blame all the more intense."Rogue batches" are often fingered: media 
reports frequently cite contaminants such as toilet cleaner, guitar wax and 
rat poison being routinely "cut" into home made batches of the drug.

But the experts working with drug users on the London scene are 
perplexed.  Because the evidence, they say, simply doesn't back this up. 
"The whole issue of contaminants in ecstasy is a myth," says Dr John 
Ramsey, head of the toxicology unit of St George's hospital medical school 
in London. His team collect pills and test them "to see what the kids are 
using". And there is no evidence, he says, of widespread contamination. 
Aside from the "fillers" such as lactose which bulk up the pills, "all the 
tablets we ever see contain nothing but drugs."

In fact, he says, the occasional dose of methylenedioxy-methamphetamine, or 
MDMA, the chemical form of pure ecstasy, should not, by rights, do you a 
lot of harm. Longer term use may cause more difficulties. "Put it this way, 
if you're using a lot and you're using it regularly, you're not going to be 
doing yourself very much good in the brain department," says Grainne 
Whalley, dance outreach coordinator for the drugs information charity Release.

It's not exactly good, but neither should it be fatal. So why are people 
still dying?

It comes back to people dancing too fast, drinking too little, resting too 
infrequently.  "Typically, the people who die are admitted to hospitals 
with extreme hyperthermia," says Ramsey. A million ecstasy pills are taken 
every week in London alone, points out Whalley, so you won't stop people using.

But it puts an even heavier burden on club promoters to ensure that they 
are looking after clubbers, by providing free water, chillout rooms, proper 
ventilation. It's depressing, she says, that years after these issues first 
came to light, people are still dying.

Ramsey confesses to being baffled by the police assertion that strychnine 
may have been to blame for the young men's deaths.

In years of testing, he says, only one pill has ever been found containing 
traces of the poison, and that may have been a hoax. So why the continued 
emphasis on contaminants in the drug? "There's an element of denial from 
the user as to why things go wrong," he says.

"They believe they aren't vulnerable, that it was a bad pill. I think it's 
because the effects of ecstasy are so pleasant, people really don't want to 
believe that something that can cause so much pleasure can also kill you."
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