Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Untold health crisis: Coronaviru­s didn't stop illicit drug use

Public health bodies have warned that illicit drug users are at high risk due to the pandemic lockdown. But whether the reason is boredom or anxiety, homecooked drugs or more users injecting, the data is slow to come.

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Times of crisis often see a rise in the use of illicit drugs and other intoxicati­ng substances — from cocaine and heroin to pills and alcohol. This has been shown by many historical reviews.

The coronaviru­s pandemic is no different. Frequently dubbed a crisis, the pandemic has created challenges for public health initiative­s, national and global economies and societies as a whole.

The ramificati­ons of national lockdowns for drug users, however, remain an untold story. That's not for want of trying, though.

Internatio­nal bodies such as the United Nations Office of Drugs and Crime (UNODC), the European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction (EMCDDA), universiti­es and initiative­s like the Global Drug Survey, have been collecting data for months.

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But as even they themselves have sometimes admitted, it is far too early to get a clear picture of the situation. The EMCDDA describes its own European Web Survey on Drugs, which includes data from April 8 to May 25, as "a rapid assessment … a snapshot."

A lot of the data is science mixedwith anecdotal evidence. So, for instance, users will say — anecdotall­y — that there's no point taking "party drugs" when you're stuck at home on your own, or that sniffing drugs helps you pass the time.

But researcher­s need more hard data and time to compare usage before and after lockdowns. So, anecdotal evidence is then only partially verified by things like wastewater analysis.

For example, the EMCDDA's preliminar­y findings suggest that the closure of the nighttime economy affected the use of cocaine and MDMA, commonly known as ecstasy, and that "decreases in the use of these drugs have been confirmed by wastewater studies in a number of

European cities."

Beyond those caveats: A crisis stack

In the USA, the pandemic slapped one crisis on top of another. The country was only just starting to deal with an opioid addiction and overdose crisis that was claiming around 130 lives per day. That was largely down to legal prescripti­on pain relievers, but also street heroin and synthetic opioids, like fentanyl. In 2018, about 32,000 Americans died from opioid overdoses.

Back in early April, before the worst of the pandemic had become apparent in the US, American medical practition­ers William C. Becker and David A. Fiellin wrote about their concerns in the journal Annals of Internal Medicine.

"Given that infection epidemics disproport­ionately affect socially marginaliz­ed persons with medical and psychiatri­c comorbid conditions — characteri­stics of those with opioid use disorder (OUD)," they wrote, "we are gravely concerned that COVID-19 will increase already catastroph­ic opioid overdose rates."

Vaping risks

In an opinion piece in the same journal, the director of the US National Institute of Drug Abuse (NIDA), Dr. Nora Volkow, included people who vape as a high-risk group.

A primary concern was "direct challenges to respirator­y health," writes Volkow.

Volkow says "preclinica­l studies show that e-cigarette aerosols can damage lung tissue, cause inflammati­on and diminish the lungs' ability to respond to infection."

Compromise­d lung function from COVID-19, writes Volkow,

could also put people who have opioid or methamphet­amine and other psychostim­ulant use disorders at risk, because chronic respirator­y disease increases the risk of fatal overdoses, including for "those who use opioids therapeuti­cally."

So that's prescripti­on drugs, as well as illicit street drugs. Solitary drug use

Anecdotal evidence from the US suggests heroin users and addicts may also be at increased risk because of social distancing and isolation measures. For one, it's been harder to get support and access to recovery programs.

Read more: Australian-Dutch police smash ecstasy smuggling ring

Peter Grinspoon, a medical practition­er writing for the Harvard (university) Health Blog, says that users who "had been using drugs with a friend are now using them alone."

So, there is often no one there to call an ambulance in the event of an overdose, or administer Naloxone, a medicinal drug that reverses the effects of opioids, such as low breathing.

As a consequenc­e, writes Grinspoon, police have been finding drug users dead — and alone — in their apartments.

Not 'merely' anecdotal evidence

Researcher­s in the UK, meanwhile, have been running the initial stages of a study into the use of other illicit drugs, such as cannabis and cocaine, during lockdown.

Tammy Ayres of Leicester University and Craig Ancrum at Teeside University are lecturers in criminolog­y. Writing for the website The Conversati­on, they reported a variety of user experience­s.

Some users said they had taken more drugs in lockdown because they had "more time on their hands … and there's not much around at the moment to make anyone feel good."

That correlates with the European Web Survey on Drugs, where users cited boredom and anxiety about COVID-19 as reasons for illicit drug consumptio­n.

In an email to DW, Ancrum wrote that "as someone with unique access to drug dealers and buyers, I can confirm that the quotes are reliable and not merely anecdotal." But the study group is "small," he says.

Others in the Ayres and Ancrum study say they have avoided using banknotes to snort drugs, because "you could be hoovering corona straight up your nose." Buyers and sellers have also spoken about carrying hand sanitizer and timing trades with "essential travel," like buying groceries.

Read more: Germany named drug use capital following Europewide sewage study

So there's a broad spectrum of findings, and both users and dealers appear to have found "work-arounds," which suggests usage continues unabated.

"I have observed no drop in sales from any of our respondent­s, in particular in respect of cocaine and cannabis," says Ancrum.

Alternativ­e highs and lows During the 2008 global economic crisis, studies found drug users switched to cheaper drugs to meet a dwindling budget.

The coronaviru­s lockdown has hit many people's budgets — not least in major European and US cities but also, for instance, in Afghanista­n, where opiates are cultivated and harvested.

Shortages could arise due to further restrictio­ns on travel or access to chemicals, such as acetic anhydride, a key ingredient in the production of heroin.

Transport routes from Iran via

Turkey to Europe may also be affected after the current harvest. Future reports will have to study what effects, if any, are felt there. Decrease in prisons

But shortages could lead to desperate measures.

Past crises have seen users injecting more — which raises other health risks, including the spread of disease, especially when needles are shared among users — and the rise of cheap alternativ­es like "sisa." Sisa is a methamphet­amine that can be cooked up in a kitchen using ephedrine, hydrochlor­ic acid, ethanol and car battery fluid. That drug was big in Greece after the 2008 crash.

For now, Ancrum says, consumptio­n habits among those he and Ayres have asked "have not changed in respect of substances," but he says there may be changes in other areas, such as with SCRAs, for example.

SCRAs, or synthetic cannabinoi­d receptor agonists, include drugs like Spice and K2, which are commonly, but not exclusivel­y, found in prisons. That's partly because the synthetic substances are harder for authoritie­s to detect in mandatory drug tests.

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It's interestin­g to note that drug use in prisons appears to have gone down during the early stages of lockdown.

An EMCDDA report in May suggested that restrictio­ns on visits and other outside contacts has "indirectly led to a decrease in the availabili­ty of drugs in some prisons, and this has sparked violent reactions from some prison inmates in France, Italy, Spain and the United Kingdom."

In China, the lockdown appears to have reduced the number of new, registered drug users. Production and demand for methamphet­amines in the Asia-Pacific region, including Thailand, the Philippine­s, Australia and New Zealand, however, appears to have suffered little impact from COVID-19 restrictio­ns. In the Middle East and Northern Africa, demand for cannabis appears to have gone up as well. But the UNODC says reliable informatio­n on drug consumptio­n in Africa "remains scarce."

The Internatio­nal Day Against Drug Abuse and Illicit Tra cking, also known as World Drug Day is marked annually on June 26. The theme of World Drug Day 2020 is "Better Knowledge for Better Care."

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 ??  ?? Prescripti­on pain killers like Fentanyl and OxyContin is seen as central to the USA's "Opioid Overdose Crisis." In 2018, about 32,000 Americans died from opioid overdoses.
Prescripti­on pain killers like Fentanyl and OxyContin is seen as central to the USA's "Opioid Overdose Crisis." In 2018, about 32,000 Americans died from opioid overdoses.

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