Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - June 15, 2012, Winnipeg, Manitoba
C M Y K PAGE A18
A 18 FRIDAY, JUNE 15, 2012
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V ANCOUVER - B. C.' s top health
official says pure ecstasy can be
" safe" when consumed responsibly
by adults, despite warnings by
police in Alberta and British Columbia
about the dangers of the street drug
after a rash of deaths.
Dr. Perry Kendall asserted the risks
of MDMA - the pure substance originally
synonymous with ecstasy - are
overblown, and its lethal dangers only
arise when the man- made chemical is
polluted by gangs who cook it up.
The chief provincial health officer is
suggesting the risks of MDMA might
be mitigated, for example, if it were
legalized and potentially sold through
licensed, government- run stores where
the product is strictly regulated from
assembly line to checkout.
He took issue with an earlier story by
The Canadian Press that characterized
him as advocating legalization.
" I am quite a strong critic of prohibition
because I don't think it keeps
drugs out of the hands of vulnerable
people, and I don't think it does much
to reduce harmful use, and I think it
has other harmful effects, like putting
billions of dollars into the hands of
criminal enterprises," Kendall said in
an interview Thursday.
However, he is not advocating legalization
as the solution but, rather, there
should be a discussion about ways of
doing things other than the current losing
war on drugs, he said.
" There's perhaps a subtle distinction
here," he said at a news conference to
clarify his views.
" I do think that we should be looking
at that approach for current illicit
psychoactive drugs, because I think
we can come up with a better mechanism
of control. What I did not say was
that I was advocating for MDMA to be
legalized at the present time and distributed
through government stores. I
said if it were to be legalized, then it
should be strictly regulated and one
way of doing that would be through
strictly controlled government exits.
There's a difference."
He posits that usage rates would decrease.
Kendall was asked whether ecstasy,
after further study around correct
dosage and in a setting involving strict
controls, could be safe.
" Absolutely," he said.
At least 16 people from B. C. to Saskatchewan
have died since July from a
tainted batch of ecstasy cut with a toxin
called PMMA. Police say an average
of 20 British Columbians who consume
street ecstasy die each year.
The RCMP in B. C. maintain no
amount of the substance is safe.
" We would view ecstasy as extremely
dangerous," said Sgt. Duncan
Pound. " Not only given the fact that
it's very hard to determine what might
be in any given tablet, but the fact that
there's such an individual reaction to
those tablets."
Medical literature says MDMA -
3,4- methylenedioxymethamphetamine
- sends waves of serotonin flooding
through the brain. The natural brain
chemical makes people feel happy, social
and intimate with others.
According to Toronto's Centre for
Addiction and Mental Health, MDMA
carries a list of potential health effects
that impact each user differently. They
include teeth- grinding, sweating, increased
blood pressure and heart rate,
anxiety, blurred vision, nausea, vomiting
and convulsions, even at low doses.
The drug's letdown can include feelings
of confusion, irritability, anxiety,
paranoia and depression, and people
may experience memory loss, sleep
problems, jaundice or liver damage.
Deaths associated with street ecstasy,
the centre's website says, usually
result from dehydration and overheating
when teens gulp a pill and dance
the night away.
But the U. S. Multidisciplinary Association
for Psychedelic Studies has
administered MDMA to more than 500
people in various FDA- approved clinical
trials, and reports there has never
been a serious adverse event.
- The Canadian Press
B. C. doctor says ecstasy can be safe
' I am quite a strong
critic of prohibition':
chief health officer
By Tamsyn Burgmann
BILL KEAY / POSTMEDIA NEWS ARCHIVES
Dr. Perry Kendall says drug prohibition doesn't keep drugs from vulnerable people.
A_ 20_ Jun- 15- 12_ FP_ 01. indd A18 6/ 14/ 12 9: 45: 25 PM
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