Manawatu Standard

Synthetic highs and lows

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day, yet the wider public is none the wiser about the drugs involved and how they relate to the shortlived attempt to control a market in psychoacti­ve substances.

All agree they are dangerous – some varieties are said to be 50 times more potent than natural cannabis. Wellington Hospital emergency medicine specialist Paul Quigley said that even a single smoke of synthetic is equivalent to up to 15 normal joints. Serious health problems include seizures and heart palpitatio­ns.

The first thing is that synthetic cannabis is not cannabis. But what are they? Even police are unsure. Speculatio­n has filled the vacuum and guesses range from fentanyl, a notorious opioid, to a powerful, cheap painkiller.

Synthetic drugs have had a confusing history in New Zealand. There were scores of products, known then as legal highs, available in dairies before the Government applied a temporary ban in 2011 and resolved to tidy up the market.

The Psychoacti­ve Substances Act two years later was seen as world-leading legislatio­n that created a regulated market if products could be proved safe.

But that market ended after less than a year, when animal testing was banned. Some have argued that these relatively less dangerous products suffered from a moral panic. The public resiled from media images of drug users lining up outside approved shops and pet owners marched against the testing of drugs on animals.

As Dunne and others predicted, the market has only been driven undergroun­d and online, where the quality and source of drugs is much harder to determine. It could be argued the eight deaths in Auckland are the unintended side effects of the panic that followed the original psychoacti­ve substances regime. As Drug Foundation executive director Ross Bell has explained, some level of Government control is surely preferable to an out of control black market.

Dunne’s dilemma is that he is a Government minister at odds with the Government. When the system fails as badly as it has this month, the public looks to him for answers and solutions. But he is one vote against an overwhelmi­ng majority that does not want drug laws changed. As Dunne says, the majority can be summarised in two words: National and Labour.

The unfortunat­e flipside is that while synthetic cannabis has killed eight people in a number of weeks and hospitalis­ed many more, ordinary cannabis has never killed anyone.

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