Pubdate: Mon, 11 Aug 2014
Source: Globe and Mail (Canada)
Copyright: 2014 The Globe and Mail Company
Contact:  http://www.theglobeandmail.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/168
Author: Adrian Morrow
Page: A4

DRUGS MORE DEADLY, HEALTH OFFICIALS SAY

Investigators think partygoers are unaware ecstasy they are taking is 
mixed with more hazardous material such as arsenic, bath salt

Party drugs appear to be getting more deadly and readily available, 
experts are warning after a rash of overdoses and deaths at music 
festivals this summer.

These drugs - which often mix ecstasy with substances as hazardous as 
arsenic and bath salts - are sometimes ingested by partygoers who 
have no idea what they contain or how to manage their effects. And 
the lethal compounds seem to be turning up more frequently.

"I think it's true that party drugs are becoming more dangerous. 
There are generally more drugs out there," said David Juurlink, head 
of the division of clinical pharmacology and toxicology at Sunnybrook 
Health Sciences Centre in Toronto.

"These drugs aren't made under conditions of strict quality control. 
Sometimes deaths result from people taking what they think is drug A, 
but it is instead drug B."

Two people died and 13 more were hospitalized after taking drugs at 
the Veld Music Festival in Toronto on Aug. 2 and 3. That same 
weekend, a woman died and more than a dozen others fell ill after 
they were believed to have taken drugs at Boonstock Music Festival in 
British Columbia's Okanagan Valley. Then, on Friday, six people were 
treated for overdoses at Calgary's Chasing Summer Festival.

Detective-Sergeant Peter Trimble, who is investigating the deaths at 
Veld, said this week police have recovered two different drugs and 
are currently testing them. He did not respond to a request for comment Sunday.

So far, it is unclear whether there is any connection between the 
overdoses in three provinces this summer.

"I don't think it's the same people, but it's the same problem," said 
John Haines, president of Addiction Canada. Mr. Haines said his 
organization, which runs several treatment centres, has in recent 
years noticed an increase in the number of people seeking help 
kicking party drugs.

And the ecstasy itself is cut with ever more dangerous additives than 
before. Where once it might have been mixed with ephedrine, it is now 
cut with a wide range of substances, from cocaine to rat poison, in a 
bid to offer a bigger high, he said.

"It was never, ever, ever, like what they're doing now," just a few 
years ago, Mr. Haines said.

The trouble with such mixtures is that people often take them without 
knowing what is inside them. Some Veld partygoers, for instance, told 
police this week they were even popping pills they had picked up off 
the ground.

Mr. Haines says the solution is a mix of education - making sure 
partiers know what risks they are taking by ingesting mystery pills - 
and better enforcement. Security at such events should be proactively 
hunting down drug peddlers selling their stuff, he said.

New Zealand, meanwhile, has taken a revolutionary approach to the 
problem. The island nation last year passed a law that regulates the 
legal use of party drugs, allowing people to manufacture and sell 
them, provided the product passes a series of trials demonstrating it is safe.

Mr. Juurlink says he understands the logic behind such a policy: Some 
risk-taking people will always try to experiment with drugs, so 
perhaps the best the government can do is regulate the substances to 
weed out the most harmful ones.

Ecstasy on its own is generally not considered life-threatening, but 
when cut with dangerous additives, cooked by unscrupulous dealers and 
ingested by dehydrated youth, it can quickly become lethal.

"All it takes is someone who doesn't know what they're doing," Mr. 
Juurlink said. "Even with the best medical care, patients still die."
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom