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News (Media Awareness Project) - Australia: Pills, Thrills and the Heath Ledger Effect
Title:Australia: Pills, Thrills and the Heath Ledger Effect
Published On:2009-08-01
Source:Sydney Morning Herald (Australia)
Fetched On:2009-08-07 06:17:45
PILLS, THRILLS AND THE HEATH LEDGER EFFECT

YOUNG Australians are mixing dangerous chemical cocktails by using
tranquillisers and sleeping pills recreationally and combining them
with other legal and illicit drugs.

"People are more and more playing chemistry," the head of emergency
medicine at St Vincent's Hospital, Gordian Fulde, said. "They take an
upper, like energy drinks or illegal drugs like ecstasy, then to
soften the landing ... they take the benzos, the Valium-type drugs, so
they don't crash and burn so harshly ... It's a hell of a mess."

Two weeks ago the Queensland State of Origin rugby league squad was
rocked by claims that players had been mixing the controversial
sleeping pill Stilnox with the energy drink Red Bull, allegedly to
produce a "high" that would evade drug tests.

While most doctors agree Stilnox abuse has declined since claims it
was involved in the death of the actor Heath Ledger, the abuse of
other pharmaceuticals, such as benzodiazepines, including Valium, is
on the rise.

There has been a 40 per cent rise over three years in the number of
people using tranquillisers and sleeping pills recreationally,
according to the latest study, but doctors say more research is needed
to understand the worsening problem.

According to Suzanne Nielsen, a researcher at the Turning Point Drug
and Alcohol Centre, pharmaceutical drugs have overtaken cannabis in
the US as the first-time abusers' choice.

"The problem, from what we know, is not of that magnitude here. But if
we don't intervene now it could become so," she said.

Dr Nielsen said people were turning to pharmaceutical drugs because
they were fairly cheap and easily available compared with illicit
drugs and they were perceived to be safe.

In the 2007 National Drug Strategy Household Survey, 1.4 per cent of
people reported recent use of tranquillisers and sleeping pills for
non-medical purposes, compared with 1 per cent in 2004. The survey
also found 1.2 million Australians, or 7 per cent, had used
painkillers, tranquillisers, barbiturates and/or steroids for
non-medical purposes at some point in their lives.

The numbers are higher among ecstasy users. Thirty-nine per cent have
used illicit benzodiazepines, according to the Australian Trends in
Ecstasy and Related Drugs Markets 2007.

The risks associated with recreational use of benzodiazepines included
over-sedation and death.

Doctors in Australia have proposed an online prescription monitoring
system to help prevent inappropriate prescribing.
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