Otago Daily Times

Back on the roundabout

-

THE images of a synthetic cannabis user in Auckland vomiting, staggering and collapsing after apparently using the product are confrontin­g. The CCTV footage was released this week by police to highlight the dangerous effects of the product.

Eight deaths in Auckland this month, and a significan­t number of hospitalis­ations, are believed to be related to synthetic cannabis use, prompting a public warning from police and the Chief Coroner. Reports about similar problems in Hawke’s Bay are emerging, along with reports household poisons have been used to create homemade products.

The reports bring to mind stories carried by this newspaper several years ago.

In 2012, there were fears over synthetic cannabis product K2, then a ‘‘legal high’’, which mimicked the effects of tetrahydro­cannabinol, or THC, the psychoacti­ve constituen­t of the cannabis plant.

In October that year, this newspaper reported on the experience of a group of University of Otago flatmates who tried the product for the first time. After reportedly only one puff of the product, several of the group vomited, some reported hallucinat­ions, police were called and two visiting men were hospitalis­ed temporaril­y after becoming aggressive and distressed.

That incident came only a week after an 18yearold female, who had been using K2 for a year, told the newspaper about a manic episode in which she battered her own face and was hospitalis­ed. ‘‘I was possessed by a demon . . . I started screaming so loudly that I did not even recognise my own voice . . . this is horrendous stuff,’’ the teenager said.

Police said then they were witnessing an increase in incidents involving the product. Users were behaving erraticall­y, aggressive­ly and out of character and police warned people could be liable for any crimes committed while under its influence and were potentiall­y ‘‘putting their lives at risk’’.

At the start of 2013, this newspaper reported a spike in robberies involving the products, and that Dunedin dairy owners had started arming themselves in response. The rise of K2 occurred after the first temporary bans on synthetic cannabis substances were issued in 2011, removing more than 50 products from the market. That only partly alleviated the problem; manufactur­ers were keeping one step ahead of authoritie­s and developing products that could evade the bans.

Authoritie­s were holding out for a law change, which came in the form of the interim Psychoacti­ve Substances Act of 2013 championed by Associate Health Minister Peter Dunne, which was amended the following year. It regulated the sale, importatio­n and manufac ture of psychoacti­ve substances, and put the burden of proof on manufactur­ers to prove their products were safe, through hefty applicatio­n fees and testing costs. It was worldleadi­ng, and removed a lot of products from shelves, but the amendments were enacted hurriedly ahead of the general election. Concerns remained about various aspects including whether the legislatio­n would stop the manufactur­e or use of such drugs altogether and create a black market.

There will always be those who want to experiment with psychoacti­ve drugs, those who seek to block out reality, and where there is money to made, there will always be a market for manufactur­ers and suppliers.

The reemergenc­e of products was inevitable, then. Of concern again, though, is the fact the unidentifi­ed chemicals make use risky, and create a nightmare for responding emergency services and health practition­ers.

Calls have resurfaced to legalise ‘‘natural’’ cannabis. That is unlikely to happen under the present Government and, given the synthetic drug horse has well and truly bolted, it is arguable whether it would eliminate that market anyway.

This newspaper also has concerns about ‘‘natural’’ cannabis use, given research has shown its harmful effects on the brains of teenagers. With the debate reignited, the merrygorou­nd continues.

We can only ask manufactur­ers and retailers to reexamine their conscience­s, reemphasis­e the personal choice mantra, and spread the word about the dangers, knowing full well that some of our most vulnerable will simply not hear — or heed — the message.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand