Weekend Gold Coast Bulletin

NANGS ‘SO EASY TO GET’

- NICHOLAS MCELROY nicholas.mcelroy@news.com.au

A GOLD Coast mother has pleaded with authoritie­s to crack down on the sale of nitrous oxide, claiming it’s too easy for school leavers to get their hands on it.

Megan Short found videos of her son collapsing after taking nangs, a drug she says ultimately cost him a job and his health. Her call for tougher policing comes two days after NSW student Hamish Bidgood fell 11-storeys from a Surfers Paradise apartment.

MEGAN Short has seen the true cost of teenagers inhaling nitrous oxide first hand – and says drastic steps must be taken so it is harder for school leavers to get their hands on the gas.

The Gold Coast mother found shocking videos of her son collapsing after using the gas, also know as nangs, a drug she says ultimately cost him a job and his health.

Ms Short says she learned her son was using up to 400 canisters a week.

“I was mortified,” Ms Short said. “He would have hallucinat­ions and then a rage after using it. It’s dangerous.”

Ms Short was so angry and hurt she confronted her son’s alleged dealer – a “weedy guy cashing in on vulnerable people”.

She is well aware the drug can be bought at stores, given its use for whipping cream, and wants similar action to be taken as is the case for volatile substance misuse, or “chroming”, where a person dangerousl­y inhales solvents or other household chemicals to get high.

She said the use of nangs, which can be bought for as little as $1 each at convenienc­e stores, should be policed in a similar way –

officers can seize and dispose of materials suspected of being used for chroming.

“Until our government­s wake up and realise this needs to be in the same category as chroming we are going to continue to see problems,” Ms Short said.

“I thank God we’re on the other side of it but it took a long time for my son to realise the dangers of nangs.

“It’s ruining lives. You go into (a retailer) and the paint is all behind a locked cupboard and you have to be aged over 18 to buy spray paint.”

Ms Short’s call for tougher policing comes two days after NSW student Hamish Bidgood fell 11-storeys from a Surfers Paradise apartment. It’s believed the 18-year-old was alone in the hotel room at the time and had used nangs in the hours before.

The drug gives shortterm highs but teenagers are repeatedly using the canisters. Large amounts of nitrous oxide can produce loss of blood pressure, fainting or heart attack. Long-term effects include memory loss, disruption to reproducti­ve systems and psychosis.

Ms Short said stores, manufactur­ers and dealers were exploiting a “loophole” to make money from the high given by nangs.

“They’ve obviously found that loophole in the system where kids are looking for a legal high,” she said. “So in our younger generation’s eyes they’re not doing anything wrong because it’s legal.

“We know it’s being abused, 99 per cent of people who are buying these bombs are getting them to abuse them.”

Schoolies said they were not deterred by a death potentiall­y associated with the drug.

“Everyone knows someone who’s doing it, guys and girls, people are still going it now, which is probably a bit stupid,” a teenage girl said yesterday.

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 ??  ?? The Surf Regency Hotel, left, Hamish Bidgood, right, and Megan Short, main image.
The Surf Regency Hotel, left, Hamish Bidgood, right, and Megan Short, main image.

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