Pubdate: Sun, 6 Dec 1998 Source: Sunday Telegraph (Australia) Page: 15 Contact: WARNINGS FOR WOMEN SYDNEY clubs may have to adopt scare campaigns warning women against accepting drinks from strangers, the National Drug and Alcohol Centre said yesterday. The problem of women having drugs slipped into their drinks in nightclubs was rife in the United States before the campaigns started there, said NADC spokesman Paul Dillon. "It would be a very sad situation if we saw it happening to the same extent here," he said. The high profile campaigns urged girls to hold on to their drinks and always have a friend watching out for them. Warnings were placed on coasters, posters and in women's toilets. "They were blanket campaigns saying to always buy your own drink hold it at all times, don't place it down, make sure you have someone who's not drinking at all looking out for you - the buddy system," Mr Dillon said. But he said the problem here was that such a campaign would "go against everything in Australian culture". "Here, girls go out and guys buy them drinks," Mr Dillon said. "The alcohol culture has changed considerably in the US because of this - in some places, people don't offer to buy drinks for others any more." The most commonly used drug in such attacks is Rohypnol, a colourless, odourless hypnotic sedative which enhances the effects of alcohol. It causes inhibitions to disappear, memory loss and, eventually, overwhelming sleepiness. Fears of the misuse of Rohypnol in Australia saw authorities declare it a drug of addiction last June. As a result, a permit from the Department of Human Services is now necessary before it can be prescribed. - --- Checked-by: Patrick Henry