Pubdate: Fri, 15 Jun 2012
Source: National Post (Canada)
Copyright: 2012 Canwest Publishing Inc.
Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/wEtbT4yU
Website: http://www.nationalpost.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/286
Author: Tristin Hopper
LEGALIZE ECSTASY?
In this occasional feature, the National Post tells you everything
you need to know about a complicated issue. Today, Tristin Hopper
looks at B.C.'S fresh drug debate:
Q - B.C.'s chief medical officer, Dr. Perry Kendall said Wednesday
that the drug MDMA ("ecstasy") is safe in pure form. Didn't it kill
all those people?
A - Over the past year, 16 people in Alberta, B.C., and Saskatchewan
have indeed died after ingesting ecstasy. But the problem was not the
ecstasy itself, it was an added ingredient, PMMA, that caused the
users' body temperatures to rocket to lethal levels. Dr, Kendall
posited this week that if production of MDMA was regulated, and if it
was sold in government-regulated liquor stores, it would keep users
out of the morgue. An Australian paper released this week would seem
to agree. On Wednesday, researchers at the Royal Perth Hospital
reported that increasingly impure ecstasy had recently caused three
otherwise healthy Perth residents to suffer severe heart attacks.
Q - SO if it's the impurities that are killing people, does that mean
MDMA is harmless?
A - In pure form, research shows that a reasonable amount of ecstasy
is not lethal, but that doesn't mean it's entirely free of side
effects. Toronto's Centre for Addiction and Mental Health lists more
than a dozen MDMA side effects, although much of them are in league
with alcohol, such as sweating, dehydration, blurred vision, nausea,
vomiting, depression and liver damage. MDMA's most best-known side
effect is teeth-grinding and jaw clenching, which can result in
dental damage. It is why ravers will often suck on a pacifier during
an ecstasy trip.
Q - still,it won't kill you if it's kept pure. Do the police care?
A - It doesn't matter if they care, since, in the eyes of the law,
ecstasy remains in league with cocaine, crystal meth and date rape
drug GHB. Regardless, the RCMP resolutely maintain that any amount of
ecstasy - even pure ecstasy - is "extremely dangerous." In February,
a spokesman for the Coquitlam RCMP told a Vancouver reporter "there
is no such thing as a good batch or a bad batch. Every single batch
represents a dangerous drug with a serious health risk."
Q - are impurities a problem with other illegal drugs?
A - Ironically, Canada's "controlled substances," are among the
country's least-controlled commodities. To evade the scrutiny of law
enforcement, narcotics are often prepared in concealed, unhygienic
conditions with almost no incentive for quality control. In Canada,
police raids have uncovered poorly ventilated ecstasy labs stuffed in
residential garages and filled with dirty equipment.
Q - marijuana is entirely legal as long as you use it for medical
purposes. Is there a medical case to be made for ecstasy?
A - Created exactly 100 years ago by German pharmaceutical maker
Merck, the intended purpose of MDMA was as a blood-clotting agent -
although it did not work. Recently, in clinical trials the drug has
shown increasing promise as an effective treatment for schizophrenia,
depression, post-traumatic stress disorder and Parkinson's Disease.
Last year, a joint British-Australian research team found initial
evidence that an altered form of MDMA could combat blood cancers such
as leukemia. In late May, David Nutt, a former chief advisor on drugs
to the British government, said controls on psychedelic drugs were
blocking valuable efforts to test the drug's medical benefits.
"Regulations, which are arbitrary, actually make it virtually
impossible to research these drugs," Mr. Nutt told a London press briefing
Q - aren'tthere similar, reportedly safer, drugs that are legal?
A - Less and less. For anybody with $20 to spend on a pill, back in
2008 there were plenty of pill-based legal ecstasy alternatives on
offer, usually from the same stores selling sex toys or marijuana
paraphernalia. Said to be a safe alternative to MDMA, the pills' most
common active ingredients were BZP and TFMPP, both from a chemical
class known as piperazines. Although the pills are not criminalized,
they are not authorized for sale in Canada, and after a March
amendment to Canada's Food and Drug Regulations, the pills can now be
legally seized by law enforcement.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom