Pubdate: Thu, 22 Feb 2007 Source: New Paltz Oracle (SUNY, NY Edu) Contact: http://oracle.newpaltz.edu/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3783 Author: Jena Leibowitz, Copy Editor Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topic/salvia+divinorum SALVIA QUESTIONED The New Paltz Police Department has issued a warning to parents in the area about the Mexican herb, Salvia Divinorum, which teens are using for its hallucinogenic effects. The New York State government is taking steps to make the now legal drug, more commonly referred to as salvia, illegal. Senator John J. Flanagan is spearheading the movement. "This drug is rapidly increasing in popularity among recreational drug users, especially among young adults and adolescents," said Senator Flanagan. "It is a drug that produces hallucinations similar to those experienced by LSD and it is readily available and legally for sale on the Internet." Salvia can be found over the Internet and even in some local shops in New Paltz. It can be found in leaf or extract form. The drug can be taken by chewing, smoking or drinking it. Experiencing the drug through the leaf causes a shorter and less intense experience, while experiencing salvia through the extract form can cause a longer and more intense experience. Kon-tiki, a shop in downtown New Paltz, sells salvia at $2.95 per gram. They only sell it in leaf form. "It sells well," said a representative from Kon-tiki. "It's cheap and legal, that's why. We get a lot of customers from it." Many students from SUNY New Paltz have never heard of the drug. "Salvia?" said junior production major Sean Dougherty. "I never heard of it." Scientific studies have found few negative effects from using the drug. In studies done by William A. Carlezon in a Forced-Swim Test, the drug was found to be a temporary depressant. According to studies conducted by Texas A&M University department of psychology, the drug can also be useful in therapy for drug addictions to stimulants, amphetamines and opiates (i.e. cocaine, methamphetamines, codeines, morphine, ecstasy). In studies conducted by Thomas E. Prisinzano, Kevin Tidgewell and Wayne W. Harding, it was found that salvia "possesses utility in the treatment of opiate dependence and have been shown to have anti-depressant activity as well as block stress-induced behavior responses," as published in the American Association of Pharmaceutical Scientists. It has also been proven to be an effective diuretic. Salvia is commonly compared to LSD. However, it is uncommonly recorded to cause one to have LSD flashbacks, but only when combined with other drugs such as marijuana and psychedelic mushrooms. Salvia is currently illegal in Australia, Belgium, Denmark, Italy and South Korea. It is recommended that when taking the drug that there is at least one person present who is sober to make sure that nothing goes wrong. Overdosing is relatively unheard of and there are no recorded deaths from salvia. The drug is almost non-toxic and is not addictive or habit-forming. The drug is believed to be cultivated and bred by the Mazatec people, found in the area of Oaxaca, Mexico. The drug was originally used in traditional ceremonies similar to peyote, a drug that is legal in certain Native American traditional ceremonies. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek