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News (Media Awareness Project) - New Zealand: Party Pill Study Aborted Over 'Severe Adverse
Title:New Zealand: Party Pill Study Aborted Over 'Severe Adverse
Published On:2007-01-21
Source:Herald On Sunday (New Zealand)
Fetched On:2008-01-12 17:12:18
PARTY PILL STUDY ABORTED OVER 'SEVERE ADVERSE EVENTS'

A Government-funded study into the effects of BZP had to be aborted
because of the toll it was taking on participants in the trial.

The subsequent report, leaked to the Herald on Sunday, says BZP - the
main ingredient in party pills - has severe negative effects,
especially if it's taken with alcohol. After consulting the National
Ethics Committee, scientists ended the trial because participants
began to suffer nausea, dizziness and hallucinations.

The confidential report, commissioned by the Ministry of Health and
due to be released publicly within a few months, explains the dangers
of the legal highs which have been sold, with few restrictions, in
shops around New Zealand for seven years.

In the draft report the Medical Research Institute of New Zealand
says that "the consumption of party pills containing BZP either alone
or in combination with alcohol in the recommended doses carries the
risk of severe adverse effects". Party pills affect sleep and
cardiovascular function in a similar way to methamphetamine, or P,
the report claims. One of the authors, Professor Richard Beasley,
suggests the report has "personal, community, public health and
regulatory implications".

The 34-page study says that 43 per cent of the 35 people who
participated - mainly males - suffered "severe adverse events" after
being given a mixture of alcohol and BZP. More than 80 per cent
reported suffering a dry mouth, nose and throat when using BZP. About
35 per cent said that they vomited, experienced vision problems, felt
dizzy, had difficulty passing urine, were confused and became
agitated. Thirty-two per cent said their libido took a knock.

However, the report also concludes that driver performance improves
among those high on the drug.

A party pill industry representative says the report reeks of bad
science and he is concerned the Government will use it to decide if
the $30 million industry should be closed.

Matt Bowden, chairman of Social Tonics Association of New Zealand -
representing 70 per cent of Kiwi party pill companies - says the BZP
doses given in the study were higher than those users normally
consumed. "When thousands of people are taking these pills, we never
see 43 per cent of them suffering adverse effects."

Party pills have become one of the most popular recreational drugs in
New Zealand, with retailers claiming to have sold 26 million. There
have been no confirmed deaths linked directly with BZP products,
banned in Australia, Denmark and the US.

Bowden says he is concerned the report has not been made public
because the authors are waiting for it to be published in a medical
journal. "How can the Government consider something that hasn't even
been reviewed by the medical profession?"

The minister responsible for drug policy, Jim Anderton, says he is
confident the research - one of four studies - is a fair reflection
of the situation, and says it is not a problem that only two brands
of BZP, Jet and Bliss, were used for the study. "It is not as though
you have to have evidence that every single packet of something is
dangerous." He concedes that the findings differ from other local
research, such as a University of Auckland study which did not
recommend stricter regulations.

A recommendation on the fate of party pills will be made to Cabinet
in May, after a consultation process. Health Ministry officials are
preparing a requested copy of the report for the United Nations.
Almost half the Government's 2006 drug advisory committee research
budget was spent on BZP.

A Canterbury man told police his sexual urges - which he blamed on
party pills - led him to sexually attack another man in December.
Johnathan Smallbon, 30, pleaded guilty in the Christchurch District
Court to kidnapping for sex, threatening to kill, assaulting while
armed with a knife, and two counts of sexually violating his victim.
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