Pubdate: Thu, 05 Mar 2015 Source: Calgary Sun, The (CN AB) Copyright: 2015 The Calgary Sun Contact: http://www.calgarysun.com/letter-to-editor Website: http://www.calgarysun.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/67 Author: Bill Kaufmann Page: 16 UPPER HAND GAINED Officials Report Falling Fatalities From PMMA Use The war against a toxic street stimulant that recently killed dozens in western Canada is bearing fruit, say those waging it. Between 2011 and 2012, the ingestion of paramethoxymethamphetamine (PMMA) claimed 27 lives in Alberta and B.C. - 20 of those in Alberta - - an unheard of toll, said Dr. Mark Yarema of Alberta Health Services. "This was an unprecedented outbreak and it required a fairly rapid and multi-disciplinary response," said Yarema, the AHS's medical director of poison and drug information. "If the show Breaking Bad was about methamphetamines, the show about PMMA would be called Breaking Worse." But since then, only one person has died at the hands of the drug - known as Dr. Death - in Alberta. Authorities credit a rise in public awareness due to collaboration between law enforcement and health experts for the decline. Those efforts also included the largest case study of its kind into the ravages of the synthetic amphetamine PMMA, which sparks higher blood pressure, heart rate and warming of the body that can prove fatal. But Yarema said the drug's threat has not disappeared, noting in 2013-14 there were six recorded PMMA cases in southern Alberta. "We're better at recognizing it and no one else had died but the problem remains ... PMMA has not gone away," he said. Media reports, educational efforts and a keener medical response have blunted the impact of the drug ingested by people who believe they were taking the stimulant ecstasy (MDMA), or cocaine, says the AHS. When the outbreak occurred in 2011-12, city police made seven arrests, four of them for trafficking in PMMA, said Det. Collin Harris. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom