Sunday Star-Times

Parents at odds over growing pill test calls Australia

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When Adriana Buccianti’s son Daniel died of a drug overdose at the Rainbow Serpent music festival in 2012, she wanted to blame someone.

‘‘I was just so distressed that I guess I wanted someone hung and quartered,’’ she said from her home in Victoria this week.

‘‘I think that kind of knee-jerk reaction from grief makes you do all sort of stuff. I called initially for the festival to be closed. I think I said things like, ‘If the police didn’t find drugs on people, they weren’t looking hard enough’. I was in a terrible headspace.’’

But in the seven years since her son died, Buccianti has managed to put her anger behind her. She’s now an advocate for the introducti­on of pill testing, and has spoken at the opening of Rainbow Serpent to caution festivalgo­ers to take of themselves and each other.

She’s also the author of a petition on Change.org with more than 93,000 signatures calling for New South Wales and Victorian premiers Gladys Berejiklia­n and Daniel Andrews to allow pill testing at music festivals.

Buccianti puts part of the change down to a conversati­on with a friend of her son’s, who asked whether she wanted to ‘‘destroy everything that he loved’’.

‘‘And I thought, ‘No, I don’t want to do that’,’’ she said.

‘‘Then the year after Daniel died, I got an automated call to purchase early-bird tickets for Rainbow, and I had to make this sliding-doors decision of what do I do here? I just said, ‘Please don’t forget my son died on your grounds’, and it set off this chain of events.’’

On Friday, the Royal Australasi­an College of Physicians joined the Australian Medical Associatio­n, the Royal Australian College of General Practition­ers and former Australian Federal Police commission­er Mick Palmer in calling for pill testing to be allowed at festivals.

There have been five deaths from suspected drug overdoses at music festivals in NSW since the middle of September. Central Coast teenager Alex Ross-King, 19, became the latest victim after she was rushed from the FOMO festival at Parramatta Park last Saturday.

Ross-King’s grandmothe­r, Denise Doig, has also called for Berejiklia­n to allow pill testing.

‘‘Premier, please can we have this pill testing done?’’ Doig told Channel Ten after her granddaugh­ter’s death. ‘‘It’s such a small thing to do. It’s not hard [and] if it saves one life, one life is a life.’’

Yesterday would have been Daniel Buccianti’s 41st birthday, and his mother admits feeling frustrated by the lack of action since his death.

She said seeing the number of deaths still occurring at festivals sometimes acted as a trigger. ‘‘Do you get re-traumatise­d again? Yeah, you do.

‘‘There’s no two ways about it. You get re-traumatise­d in the sense that you know what those people are going to go through. There’s the autopsy, and the coroner, and the toxicology report. It’s brutal, it tells you everything, not just, ‘Your son died of this’.

‘‘And it all takes months to come back, so you’re left just wondering, ‘How could this have happened?’.

‘‘Then there’s the stigma of losing your child to an overdose. The comments you get whenever a story comes out. The horrific stuff people say to you, like ‘Your son deserved this’, that ‘It was natural selection’.’’

She said Berejiklia­n should ‘‘put herself in any of our positions, those of us who have lost children to something avoidable’’.

Not every parent of a drug overdose victim feels the same, however.

Tony Wood, the father of Anna Wood, who died in 1995, aged 15, has been a vocal opponent of pill testing, saying it would not make taking drugs safer.

‘‘Pill testing is another lark thought up by the pro-legalisati­on lobby,’’ he said.

‘‘If it was going to save any parent from the heartache of losing a child, I would be all for it. I can’t think of any situation where it would work.’’

Julie Davis, whose son Stefan Woodward died of an overdose at the Stereosoni­c festival in Adelaide in 2015, also said she did not support pill testing. ‘‘What happened to ‘Say no to drugs’?’’ she asked.

She said festival organisers should be ‘‘accountabl­e for deaths that occur’’ on their watch, and called for ‘‘more first aid tents so no one waits in line waiting to be helped . . . free water, more paramedics walking around [who] know the signs of dehydratio­n, [and] huge fines or jail time [for people caught] with drugs.’’

‘‘If it saves one life, one life is a life.’’ Denise Doig, grandmothe­r of victim Alex Ross-King

 ?? DAVID ALEXANDER/STUFF ?? Calls for pill testing to be allowed at music festivals are gaining ground in Australia – but the parents of young people who died after taking illegal drugs at festivals are divided over whether it would help to keep people safe.
DAVID ALEXANDER/STUFF Calls for pill testing to be allowed at music festivals are gaining ground in Australia – but the parents of young people who died after taking illegal drugs at festivals are divided over whether it would help to keep people safe.

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