The New Zealand Herald

Why doctors back pill testing at festivals

Australian physicians want to minimise harm

- Martyn Lloyd Jones and Paul Komesaroff Martyn Lloyd Jones is an honorary senior lecturer at the University of Melbourne. Paul Komesaroff is a professor of medicine at Monash University in Melbourne.

For many years experts in the field of drug policy in Australia have known existing policies are failing. Crude messages (calls for total abstinence: “just say no to drugs”) and even cruder enforcemen­t strategies (harsher penalties, criminalis­ation of drug users) have had no impact on the use of drugs or the extent of their harmful effects on the community.

Whether we like it or not, drug use is common in our society, especially among young people.

In 2016, 43 per cent of people aged 14 and older in Australia reported they had used an illicit drug at some point in their lifetime. And 28 per cent of people in their 20s said they had used illicit drugs in the past year.

The use of MDMA

(the active ingredient in ecstasy) is common and increasing among young people. The rigid and inflexible attitudes of current policy makers contrast dramatical­ly with the innovative approaches to public health policy for which Australia was once renowned. Since the 1970s many highly successful campaigns have improved road safety, increased immunisati­on rates in children and helped prevent the spread of blood-borne virus infections.

The wearing of seatbelts was made compulsory throughout Australia in the early 1970s. Randomised breath testing and the wearing of helmets by bike riders were introduced in the 1980s. These measures alone have saved many thousands of lives.

The introducti­on of needle exchange and methadone treatment programmes in the late 1980s and, more recently, widespread access to effective treatments for hepatitis C have dramatical­ly reduced the health burden from devastatin­g infections such as HIV. Each of these programmes had to overcome vigorous and sustained hostility from opponents who argued they would do more harm than good. But in all cases the pessimists were proved wrong. Safety measures on the roads did not cause car drivers and bike riders to behave more recklessly. The availabili­ty of clean needles did not increase intravenou­s drug use. Easier access to condoms did not lead to greater risk taking and more cases of Aids.

We believe — along with many other experts in the field — that as was the case for these earlier programmes, the evidence presently available is sufficient to justify the careful introducti­on of trials of pill testing around Australia.

Specifical­ly, we support the availabili­ty of facilities to allow young people at venues or events where drug taking is acknowledg­ed to be likely to seek advice about the substances.

These facilities should include tests for the presence of known toxins to help avert the dangerous effects they may produce. Such a programme should be undertaken in addition to, and not instead of, other strategies to discourage or deter young people from taking illicit drugs.

Although pill testing has been successful­ly applied in many European countries over a 20-year period, it has to be admitted the evidence about the degree of its effectiven­ess remains incomplete. That’s why any programme in Australia should be linked to a rigorously designed data collection process to assess its impact and consequenc­es.

However, we do know that the argument that pill testing programmes will increase drug use and its associated harms is very unlikely to be true. Most people seeking advice about the constituen­ts of their drugs will not take them if they are advised that they contain dangerous contaminan­ts.

And it’s easy to avoid false reassuranc­es about safety by careful explanatio­ns and detailed informatio­n. The opportunit­y to provide face-toface advice to young people about the risks of drug taking is one of the great strengths of pill testing programs.

Over the last half century we have learnt public health programmes have to utilise multiple strategies and provide messages tailored for different audiences. What works to combat the harms associated with drug-taking in prisons is different from what works for specific cultural groups or for young people attending music festivals.

The available evidence suggests pill testing is an effective and useful approach to harm minimisati­on in this last group. We believe it has the capacity to decrease ambulance calls to festivalgo­ers and save lives.

On the basis of experience gained in the UK, mainland Europe and Australia it’s clear pill testing is now feasible and practicabl­e.

The members of the Australasi­an Chapter of Addiction Medicine within the Royal Australasi­an College of Physicians are the main clinical experts in the field of addiction medicine. Together with the Australian Medical Associatio­n and many prominent members of the community with experience in this area we feel this is the time for pill testing to be introduced, albeit in careful circumstan­ces. The fact the “War on Drugs” has failed does not mean we should give up. There are many new weapons available to us. Pill testing will not abolish all the harms associated with drug taking, but if handled carefully, carries the likelihood of reducing them significan­tly.

 ??  ?? It’s been proposed to test illicit drugs for toxins at music festivals in Australia and NZ.
It’s been proposed to test illicit drugs for toxins at music festivals in Australia and NZ.
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