Plenary 2: Healthy Clubbing: A joint agenda for research, policy
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d) 10 years of ecstasy and other party drug
use in Australia: What have we done and what is there left to do?
Paul Dillon
National Drug and Alcohol Research
Centre, University of New South Wales, Sydney, 2052 NSW, Australia.
Phone no: +61 – 2 9398 9333 Fax no: +61 – 2 9399 7143
E-mail: ndarc23@unsw.edu.au
History of Ecstasy
It is difficult to
say when ecstasy first came to Australia, but it seemed to be brought
in by a religious group called the ‘Orange People’ in the late 1970s,
early 1980s. The first media reports of ecstasy use in Australia
were in the mid-1980s. In the late 1980s and the early 1990s use
was low, as were problems with use and in fact, in the 1988-1991
national Drug Household Surveys, only 1-2% of the population had
ever tried the drug. Interestingly, in 1995 9% of 14-29 year old
females had tried the drug. In 1998, it leapt even higher: 5% of
the population had tried ecstasy.
When it comes to the
law, it is very complex. In 1985, it was made illegal in the USA
under emergency action and placed by the DEA into Schedule One.
As Australia is known to do, it quickly followed America’s lead
and changed its laws also.
Ecstasy deaths
In terms of ecstasy
related deaths, we do not have any central collection of drug overdoses
in Australia and it has made it very difficult over the past few
years, particularly with the increase in heroin deaths that we have
had, so it is very difficult to determine. Between 1995 and 1997,
there were at least twelve deaths. At least six involved PMA (paramethoxyamphetamine),
either alone or in conjunction with MDMA. Most of these were in
Adelaide. There has been a lot of media hype around the fact that
Adelaide has the highest rate of ecstasy related deaths per capita
in the world. This batch of deadly PMA ecstasy was gradually released
over a two-year period.
Unlike some other countries,
Australia has no published information on national or State hospital
admissions so little is known about how many people are going into
hospital following an ecstasy overdose. Ecstasy related deaths are
rare compared with the likely frequency of its use. If you compare
it to heroin, for example, 2% of the Australian population has tried
heroin and there were six hundred deaths in 1997. 5% percent of
the population have tried ecstasy and there were four deaths in
1997 – from all stimulant deaths (not just ecstasy).
However, ecstasy deaths
are unpredictable. No one really knows why some of these deaths
have occurred. Some of the likely reasons that have been put forward
are either genetic differences or concurrent use of other drugs.
In 1995, interestingly the week after the UK experienced the Leah
Betts phenomenon, we had a very similar death. A young fifteen-year
old school girl, Anna Wood, died as a result of taking an ecstasy
tablet. This generated incredible media coverage. In fact, it almost
destroyed the harm reduction movement in Australia and as a result
has hindered harm reduction messages getting through to current
and potential users of the drug. In fact, the national household
survey figures before and after, and any figures around the time
of her death, show quite a dramatic increase almost straight after
her death. Ecstasy was a drug that no one knew very much about prior
to Anna’s death and in a very short period of time people knew where
you could get it, how much it would cost, and that the purity was
high. It was a major advertising campaign for the drug.
Ecstasy deaths continue
to be rare but they do happen and this is one of the biggest problems
we face. People do not believe that people are dying as a result
of taking ecstasy. Admittedly it is very few, but there are other
harms associated with ecstasy. Users are regularly seen by emergency
departments across the country.
There was a recent
study conducted at a Sydney inner city hospital which was getting
all the drug related overdoses. It found that 30% percent of all
illicit drug overdoses were ecstasy related. Deaths do continue
to go unreported: there are at least five or six a year that never
make the media. This normally happens if the death occurs some time
after using the drug, so that individuals do not actually die on
the dance floor but die on the Thursday or the Friday of the following
week. The other one is if the family do not wish to highlight the
cause of death and, of course, that always makes it really, really
difficult for the media to get any really juicy comments.
The most recent high
profile death was at a Sydney nightclub. A twenty-two year old man
died from MDMA overdose. In fact, his toxicity levels were twice
as high as a normal MDMA overdose would be. GHB (gamma-hydroxybutyrate)
was also implicated but if you do not actually withdraw blood from
a person who has used GHB within four hours it is impossible to
actually tell whether that person has used GHB or not. The headlines
that surrounded this death included ‘Death on the dance floor’ and
‘Designer poison’, but there was not the same amazing amount of
media uproar as with the Anna Wood case. One of the key reasons
for this is that the parents refused to become involved in the media
circus. We could actually step in as health authorities, as people
who have some knowledge in the area and give accurate information
about the drugs, and surprise, surprise, the media were not particularly
interested in good credible accurate information, which they found
very difficult to make sensational headlines out of. If they had
had parents crying on the front page of the paper, they could have
done something with it but as a result the emotive angle of the
story could not be generated.
The Epidemiology
of Ecstasy in Australia
What is known about
ecstasy in Australia? There were three Australian studies conducted
in the early 1990s, all with very different approaches. The first
one in 1990 looked at one hundred users. They appeared to be using
for special events, maybe a major dance party or an occasional big
night out. Ecstasy use appeared to be self-limiting, with many users
discontinuing use after a very short period of time.
The next study was
conducted in 1992 and was an ethnographical study of a social network
of psycho-stimulants, not just ecstasy use in Perth. This looked
more at the rituals around ecstasy use and found very few problems,
although for the very first time injecting of ecstasy was noted.
In 1993, another survey was conducted, this time in Melbourne. These
were three very different areas of Australia. This study demonstrated
that ecstasy use was opportunistic: if people got it they used it,
if they did not, they did not really mind. The health effects they
were reporting were relatively minor apart from those who were heavy
users, and even they were only reporting things such as depression
and headaches. The evidence concluded that ecstasy seemed to be
controlled by its relatively high cost, its social sections and
other more common drug use, so these people were interested in other
drugs because they were more widely available.
In 1997, the National
Drug and Alcohol Research Centre conducted a major study of 329
existing users across three Australian States. Compared to the 1990
survey, there was quite a big gap. There had been the deaths and
a whole pile of things happening in the media circuit. We really
needed to know what was happening with ecstasy use in Australia
at that time and it was quite a dramatic difference to what had
been seen earlier. The users were now younger, they were more diverse,
there were more females, and they used more and more often.
Price, purity and
availability
With regard to price,
purity and availability, ecstasy is expensive in Australia. It has
remained pretty stable and it depends where it is bought. If you
buy it in a nightclub you are taking more risks and it does cost
more. For the past decade, it has cost between Australian $50 (approximately
£20) and Australian $70 (approximately £28) but the average street
price is about Australian $40 (approximately £ 16 )
In terms of purity,
data for Australian MDMA, the average is around 34%, ranging from
less than 1% to about 85%. If you look at most tablets they contain
70-85mg of MDMA. It is far less than the desirable dose of 120 milligrams.
There appears to be much ecstasy flooding into Australia from different
markets, no longer just the Netherlands and the UK. We are now getting
it from Asia where there is increased production and also the US.
In 1991, there were two seizures of the drug totalling 0.3 kilos
- but in 1999 they had 100 seizures and got 89 kilos.
Responses
So what have the government
done about it? Basically, the government have done very little.
1991 saw the first pamphlet on ecstasy released. In 1993, the New
South Wales health department financed a booklet called "Rave
Safe" and a video for ravers. That name has now been adopted
by a whole range of different organisations because it did so well,
and the term ‘Rave Safe’ has been used for a number of different
projects around the country.
In 1997, an ecstasy
education kit for dance party nightclub patrons and venue operators
was launched called ‘Project E’. As far as I am aware, this is the
only national ecstasy campaign that has ever been done in the world.
It basically had two sections: it was an information kit for users,
and on the inside there was a venue information guide for venue
operators on how to make the venues safer.
In 1998, during our
study of 329 ecstasy users we were asked so many questions about
ecstasy, and what exactly people were putting into their bodies
when they took it, that we wrote a booklet called ‘Ecstasy: Facts
and Fiction’, which has been incredibly successful over the last
few years.
Trends
Prevalence of use has
doubled in the last few years, and we are seeing that those people
who chose to use are using more and are using more often. Users
are definitely getting younger. Injecting is becoming more wide
spread amongst regular users. Poly-drug use is increasing as well
as the range of drugs, with the introduction of substances such
as Special K or ketamine and GHB.
The only Australian
government campaign funded so far targeted the dance party or nightclub
scene. However, the drug is actually going mainstream now and that
also sets quite a few challenges. How do we actually target everybody?
It is going to be very difficult. Prices are dropping, availability
is on the increase and we are going to see younger people using.
That is something else we have to start to think about.
Do we educate about
ecstasy in high schools? In Australia this is not done and it is
something to think about. Sensational media reporting has resulted
in many young people completely disbelieving harm reduction messages.
When you interview people, they believe it is adult propaganda.
They do not think that there is any harm associated with the drug
at all and that is potentially dangerous.
Is there any good news?
In 1997, GHB entered the Australian and importantly the Sydney dance
party scene; GHB, GBH, gamma hydroxidybutyrate, ‘grievous bodily
harm’ or ‘liquid ecstasy’, made an impressive introduction with
200 non-fatal overdoses in two months. Some inner city hospitals
were seeing 60 cases a week. The reason is that when used in conjunction
with other drugs, particularly alcohol, it tends to depress the
respiratory system so you end up going into respiratory distress.
We thought this was a nightmare, but actually some very positive
things happened as a result. There was first a community based approach
to the problem.
This was mainly a gay problem. At the
last Mardi Gras party there was a real problem. There were so many
people dropping as a result of using GHB we had to do something.
We got the community together and said, "Okay let’s actually
have a dialogue about drug use", something that the gay community
had never done before. As a result there was a whole series of things
which came up around it and we had a campaign called ‘Party safe,
party together’ which was extremely successful.
When GHB came up no one knew anything
about it, but they knew where to come. They knew that there were
people who could speak to the media. I made myself available and
we actually got some good quality information in early on, instead
of scare mongering stuff. We were able to say what we knew about
the drug, the harms etc. I already write a weekly column for a gay
magazine, but this has led to me being asked to write a weekly column
for a national newspaper on harm reduction and drugs and also a
national magazine as well. That is amazing and it also means that
we can actually get some good quality information out of it too.
Finally, nightclubs and dance parties
are utilising drug and alcohol services and information as a result
of GHB and particularly a death that occurred at a nightclub in
Sydney. The owner of the nightclub brought me in and asked, "What
can we do here to make our nightclub even safer?" His club
was probably the safest in Sydney anyway but he actually wanted
to do more. The hope is that we will shame other nightclubs to actually
look after their patrons better.
The future
Finally, what does
the future hold? We need funding, not only to research the effects
both short-term and long-term which users are interested in, but
also to monitor the trends which are constantly changing. We really
need to have some better information about combinations: what actually
will happen if this drug and this drug are used together.
Relationships with
the media need to be nurtured, so that when something does go wrong
they will know where to go for good, accurate information, and so
that the dissemination of credible warnings is possible, instead
of ludicrous things that no one believes. Although the drug seems
to be becoming more mainstream, we still need to work with nightclubs
and the dance party scenes. Some of them have been terrific at getting
some good information out. Finally, the community-based approach
is a powerful tool and we should actually utilise the dance party
scene as much as we can to get the good messages forward.
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