The Sunday Post (Dundee)

Specialist­s: Isolated users at risk as More seek numbing oblivion in lockdown

- By Krissy Storrar kstorrar@sundaypost.com

Drug users are becoming more isolated and taking more numbing but potentiall­y fatal opiods and tranquilli­sers in lockdown, according to internatio­nal research.

Experts believe drugs such as benzodiaze­pines or traditiona­l and synthetic versions of powerful opioids like heroin are becoming more popular because they are more suited to being consumed alone and have a numbing effect. These drugs are also more easily available as criminals can manufactur­e them in Scotland and avoid problems with importing drugs caused by the pandemic and Brexit.

But it is feared the worrying trend could be reflected in Scotland’s drug death figures, as in some local authority areas, benzodiaze­pines – commonly known as street benzos – are already involved in three-quarters of fatalities. Experts are also concerned that any move away from recreation­al drugs like MDMA or cocaine towards substances which dull emotions could be more likely to impact younger users.

In 2019 there were 1,264 drugs deaths in Scotland, with an average age of 42. Street benzos contribute­d to 814 deaths. Professor Simona Zaami of the Sapienza University of Rome has studied new trends in substance abuse during the Covid-19 pandemic.

She believes uncertaint­y caused by the pandemic combined with lockdown measures restrictin­g socialisin­g are driving drug users to take substances known to have a calming effect. The research stated: “In this period of home confinemen­t, users might no longer be looking for ‘socialisin­g’ substances to be used in recreation­al settings, but for psychotrop­ic drugs to be consumed in solitude.

“Since recreation­al drug use usually occurs in groups or crowded environmen­ts, the implementa­tion of social distancing in response to the Covid-19 crisis may have modified drug use patterns: a shift to substances that can be consumed in solitude and have a relaxing

effect, such as opioids, new synthetic opioids, or new benzodiaze­pines, is expected.”

Prof Zaami said: “During the pandemic, feelings of insecurity rose and at the same time drugs markets became complicate­d because of lockdown. So users look for drugs at their disposal that are nearby. You look for these narcotic analgesics so you can be isolated from reality, because reality at the moment is hard.”

David Liddell, CEO of the Scottish Drugs Forum, said the price and availabili­ty of illicit substances in Scotland does not appear to have been impacted by coronaviru­s.

But he said: “There remains the question of whether drug use has changed. This is harder to measure. Speculatio­n that people who have otherwise used drugs like cocaine or MDMA in social settings may now be more socially isolated and use other drugs – benzodiaze­pines or alcohol for example seem plausible. Our concern would be that in Scotland, where street benzodiaze­pines are readily available, this switch may involve people developing a dependency on a drug that they then struggle to cut down or stop using.

“There is also concern that mixing benzodiaze­pines with other drugs including alcohol may cause overdose deaths. Drug overdose death statistics show that deaths are increasing faster among people under 25 than those in older people.”

Police Scotland has made a number of significan­t drugs seizures since last March, including earlier this month two raids in Bellshill and Motherwell, Lanarkshir­e, which netted drugs worth £520,000, and in 2018 four men were jailed for manufactur­ing at least £1.67million of street valium from a garage in Paisley.

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