Pubdate: Thu, 2 Jul 2009 Source: Courier-Mail, The (Australia) Page: 16 Copyright: 2009 Queensland Newspapers Contact: http://www.news.com.au/couriermail/editorial/letter Website: http://www.news.com.au/couriermail/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/98 Author: Renee Viellaris Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mdma.htm (Ecstasy) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) TAINTED ECSTASY WILL CAUSE OVERDOSES DRUG cooks spiking ecstasy with addictive painkillers and anti-depressants have prompted Queensland's crime watchdog to warn of impending health carnage. A new report to be released by the Crime and Misconduct Commission later this year will reveal drug dealers are more than ever playing Russian roulette with Queenslanders' lives. CMC intelligence director Chris Keen told The Courier-Mail the Illicit Drug Assessment Survey would raise the threat level for ecstasy for the short-to-medium term because of predictions of further overdoses and more users needing medical help. Drugs Scourge In-Depth Mr Keen said the purity of ecstasy in Queensland had halved in recent years as drug makers pressed ecstasy with other harmful substances in a bid to increase profits and meet demand. "Whereas previously a tablet may have mainly contained ecstasy as the active drug there is now an increased incidence of tablets containing other types of drugs within one tablet," he said. Methamphetamine an addictive stimulant anti-depression drugs and ketamine, a human/veterinary painkiller, were often found in ecstasy. The Courier-Mail revealed this year the toxic cocktail had led to psychosis, seizures, organ failure and death. Mr Keen said users wrongly believed they were taking a safe "party drug". "A person who believes they have overdosed from ecstasy may be shown from a toxicology perspective to be from anti-depressive drugs because that was major content of the tablet," Mr Keen said. "To meet the high market demand tablets are being sold as ecstasy that contain no ecstasy at all. "Another result of lower purity tablets is that consumers are on average swallowing more tablets in a session (from one to two) than they were five to six years ago, possibly this is to seek achieving the same high. "This type of behaviour creates a greater risk for adverse reactions and overdoses." The report is undertaken by Queensland Police and Queensland Health about every four years and helps law enforcement direct resources. The survey is a concern for police who have not been as successful in stamping out ecstasy as they have with speed, for which the market has started to dry up in the wake of new laws that monitor the sale of pseudoephedrine, used in influenza drugs. But Mr Keen said he was hopeful a new move to regulate tablet presses would make it harder for the black market to prosper. A report by the Australian Crime Commission this year revealed Australia had the highest use of ecstasy per capita in the world. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake