Weekend Herald

Lifting the lid on drugs in small towns

Researcher­s will soon test wastewater treatment plants around the country to identify trends and problems

- Ophelia Buckleton

The researcher behind the first drugtestin­g of Auckland’s waterways is taking the study further afield to tackle drug and alcohol problems in small- town New Zealand.

The Massey University study, led by Associate Professor Chris Wilkins, will also include New Zealand’s first online alcohol and drug survey, to be launched today.

Wilkins said the research was a response to community and drug treatment workers who have reported a lack of health services to deal with the increasing use of drugs including methamphet­amine and synthetic cannabinoi­d in small towns and cities.

“At the moment, there are almost no statistics on what [ the drug- related issues are]. So the problem for people living in those communitie­s is they say ‘ look we have got a really bad drug and alcohol problem here, but we’ve got no health or treatment services’,” said Wilkins.

“But when they try to make the case for more services, because they don’t have that data to back them up, they’re really stuck.

“We need some research to find out what is going on [ in small towns] and then decide how we are going to reallocate resources.”

Researcher­s from Massey’s SHORE and Whariki Research Centre planned on testing wastewater treatment plants around the country, starting with the Bay of Plenty, to get a better idea of what substances are out there and at what level.

Testing can detect levels of drugs and alcohol from the substance itself and the metabolite — what the body excretes after the drug has been consumed — found in pooled sewage.

It is done at the inlet of a sewage treatment plant, meaning testing covers the entire community while guaranteei­ng no individual or household is identified.

Wilkins wouldn’t name all the areas where testing is planned but said researcher­s would visit small towns as well as some main centres.

The testing would coincide with the nationwide online survey, which will ask participan­ts a range of questions to identify recent drug trends, such as availabili­ty and price.

It will also ask about gaps in health services and barriers to finding help in different communitie­s.

“It’s not going to be possible to build a residentia­l drug treatment facility in every small town and city in New Zealand but there will be a whole lot of options about how they might want to utilise health services,” said Wilkins.

Tests of the contents of Auckland’s sewers, carried out between May and July 2014, revealed high levels of methamphet­amine, codeine, morphine and methadone in t wo wastewater treatment plants servicing 1.3 million people.

Methamphet­amine was the most commonly detected drug of the 17 targeted — cannabis was excluded — with an overall mean of 360mg estim- ated to have been consumed per day per 1000 people.

The study was led by Wilkins and the SHORE and Whariki Research Centre, along with environmen­tal toxicologi­sts from Queensland University’s National Research Centre for Environmen­tal Toxicology.

The new study will run from this weekend until February 2018.

The online alcohol and drug survey can be completed from a smart phone, tablet or computer via drugs. shore. ac. nz, over the phone on 0800 554 101, or face- to- face with an interviewe­r on request, by texting the word “research” to 0800 554 101.

No names or contact details are required and everything said is confidenti­al.

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