New Zealand: Kiwi party pill research could lead to Oz ban - paper
Research showing overdoses with "herbal" party pills in New Zealand have resulted in hundreds of people needing hospital treatment may lead to the pills being banned in Australia.
A study, by Waikato Hospital's Dr Tonia Nicholson, found 125 of 1043 emergency admissions at a New Zealand hospital were the result of over-indulging in herbal party pills.
Cabinet Minister Jim Anderton, who is in charge of drugs policy, said in January there were three research projects currently underway into the effects of benzylpiperazine (BZP), the active ingredient in legal party pills.
If the pills, which can currently be sold to anyone over the age of 18, were proved sufficiently dangerous they could be banned, he said.
The stimulants produce effects similar to amphetamines: users risk organ damage, seizures, high blood pressure and hyperthermia by taking too many or mixing them with alcohol.
Dr Nicholson said one New Zealander had died after mixing BZP with amphetamines and two others had been in intensive care after taking the pills.
The pills have been responsible for hundreds of recent drug overdoses in New Zealand, and Australia's Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA) is deciding whether their key ingredients - pepper extracts benzylpiperazine (BZP) and trifluromethylpiperazine - should be slapped with Australia-wide sales restrictions, the Sun Herald newspaper reported in Melbourne.
BZP pills are illegal in NSW, Queensland and Western Australia and are not readily available in Victorian retail outlets.
National's Otago MP Jacqui Dean has previously called for the Government to impose tighter restrictions on advertising, banning the sale of pills from bars and liquor shops and keeping them under the counter and out of sight in shops.
Newshawk: http://www.napnt.org/amphetablog.html
Pubdate: Sat, 15 April 2006
Source: stuff.co.nz (New Zealand)
Website: http://www.stuff.co.nz/
Copyright: Fairfax New Zealand Limited 2006







1 Comments:
This post is based on false reporting of the survey. The statement "A study, by Waikato Hospital's Dr Tonia Nicholson, found 125 of 1043 emergency admissions at a New Zealand hospital were the result of over-indulging in herbal party pills." is absolutely false.
Dr Nicholson surveyed 1043 people who walked into the emergency department and, among other questions, asked them if they had EVER used party pills. 125 said yes. They were not at the emergency department because of party pills.
If they had asked the 1043 people if they had happened to have brushed their teeth that morning I suspect there would have been no headlines.
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