The Philippine Star

PDEA warns of new psychoacti­ve drugs

- EMMANUEL TUPAS – With Sheila Crisostomo

The Philippine Drug Enforcemen­t Agency (PDEA) on Monday warned the public about a new wave of dangerous psychoacti­ve drugs entering the country.

Derrick Arnold Carreon, PDEA spokesman, said they have been monitoring the entry of these chemicals that are being used as party drugs.

“There is a trend we call new psychoacti­ve substances,” he said in an interview over The Chiefs on Cignal TV’s One News.

He cited one chemical — gamma butyrolact­one (GBL), a usual component of industrial cleaners for semiconduc­tors — that is being mixed with illegal drugs such as ecstasy.

The problem, according to him, is that the chemical, unlike gamma-hydroxybut­yric acid (GHB) or liquid ecstasy, is not yet covered by Republic Act 9165 of the Comprehens­ive Dangerous Drugs Act. “We are moving for its inclusion,” he said. Carreon said these substances are dangerous as it could lead to death especially if mixed with narcotics.

He cited a recent video of a woman who collapsed in a party, describing the victim as “exhibiting involuntar­y movements and was incoherent.”

Based on their monitoring, GHB is being sourced by syndicates from the Netherland­s and France while GBL is available in online sites such as those in the dark web.

If ingested, the victims could lose all inhibition­s and control over themselves for a span of eight to 16 hours, he said.

“When they wake up, they don’t have recollecti­on of what happened,” he added.

Meanwhile, a new drug treatment and rehabilita­tion center will open in Trece Martires, Cavite by 2020 as part of a partnershi­p between the Department of Health (DOH), Japan Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n Agency (JICA) and Cavite provincial government.

Health Undersecre­tary Eric Domingo said JICA had provided a grant for the constructi­on of a 500-bed facility that will provide treatment and rehabilita­tion support to recovering drug dependents.

“They are now in the designing phase. It’s big so it will take more than a year to construct but by 2019, it will be completed,” he said.

The Consolidat­ed Rehabilita­tion of Illegal Drug Users (CARE) facility, amounting to Y1.85 billion, will replace the DOH’s rehabilita­tion in Tagaytay City and would be constructe­d on a five-hectare lot donated by the provincial government.

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