Pubdate: Wed, 29 Aug 2012 Source: Nanaimo Daily News (CN BC) Copyright: 2012 Nanaimo Daily News Contact: http://www.canada.com/nanaimodailynews/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1608 Author: Darrell Bellaart NEW DESIGNER DRUG ON OUR STREETS WORRIES NANAIMO POLICE RCMP urge parents to talk to kids about the harms of using 'bath salts', which is gaining more attention The appearance of a dangerous designer drug known as "bath salts" on Vancouver Island streets has police and drug education officials worried the week before school resumes. A Duncan RCMP officer uncovered a significant quantity of the drug methylenedioxypyrovalerone, or MDPV, during a routine check of a vehicle parked on the Trans-Canada Highway early Sunday morning. The drug, known under a variety of street names, including "ivory wave," "purple wave," and "vanilla sky," was created by chemists looking for a legal way to manufacture drugs similar to the illegal stimulant methamphetamine. It is associated with bizarre behaviours, including an act of cannibalism in Miami in May, although media reports later questioned whether the man who attacked a homeless person was on the drug. Nanaimo RCMP are concerned to find 400 grams MDPV among sizable quantities of cocaine, GHB, hashish, LSD, marijuana and MDMA (ecstasy) in a vehicle parked at Kipp Road. It is "one of the first instances" of such a find in B.C., said Sgt Duncan Pound, a federal RCMP spokesman. In Nanaimo, Const. Sherri Wade said police "want parents to talk to their kids about bath salts, and drugs in general. "You never know how anyone is going to respond to any drug and you never know what's in it." Don Monsour, Crystal Clear Drug Prevention Society president, said parents need to be aware of it when school resumes. "This is brand new and we're not on top of it," Monsour said. "We're going to do a lot more work and incorporate it into our classes." The Victoria-based organization, originally formed to target methamphetamine use, now does classroom presentations around the Island, including Nanaimo, to educate youth about the risks of all street drugs. The drug is so new it's not included in the schedule of regulated drugs in Canada. News reports fed hysteria over the drug in May, when a Miami man bit the face of a homeless person beside a busy roadway before police shot and killed him. It was later revealed the attacker had not taken MDPV. But in June, federal Health Minister Leona Aglukkaq announced government would quickly move to classify the main ingredient in MDPV alongside other dangerous drugs like cocaine and methamphetamine. The drug's effects include agitation and increased heart rate and blood pressure. Higher doses can create paranoia, hallucinations and aggression. It gets its street name from the fact it is sometimes legally sold as bath salts. Used as a drug, MDPV "is known for its tendency to cause compulsive redosing and some users report sexual arousal as an effect," according to the drug information website Vault of Erowid. Most users report negative experiences using the drug, on the non-profit organization's wiki-style website. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom