Skip Navigation

New drug found ‘every week’ in EU

A new drug is reported in Europe at a rate of about one every week, according to a new report.

Some 50 new substances have already been detected this year, the European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction (EMCDDA) said, with new drugs reported in the EU at the rate of around one per week.

A total of 49 new "psychoactive" substances were officially notified for the first time in 2011, the EMCDDA said - the largest number ever reported in a single year, up from 41 in 2010, and 24 in 2009. And preliminary data for 2012 showed no signs of a decline, with more than 50 already detected so far this year.

According to the EMCDDA's annual report, The State of the Drugs Problem in Europe, the number and diversity of substances reported is rising and drugs are becoming more obscure. All new drugs notified last year and so far this year were synthetic, with more obscure chemical groups being reported, it said.

The agency said Europe is faced with an increasingly complex stimulant market, with consumers confronted with a wide variety of powders and pills.

While cocaine, ecstasy and amphetamines continue to be the main stimulants, they are competing with a growing number of emerging synthetic drugs, such as cathinones - which include mephedrone or "meow meow".

Cecilia Malmstrom, European Commissioner with responsibility for the EMCDDA, said: "Stimulant and synthetic drugs play a central role in the European drug situation, creating a market which is fast-moving, volatile and difficult to control.

"More than ever before, young people are exposed to a plethora of powders and pills. Data from emergency rooms, toxicology reports and drug treatment centres indicate that the associated risks are not always well known by the users."

The report, launched in Lisbon, revealed that amphetamine-type stimulant 4-methylamphetamine (4-MA) is now under scrutiny after several deaths in Europe, including the UK, were linked to its use. It will be looked at by the EMCDDA's Scientific Committee with experts from the European Commission, Europol and the European Medicines Agency.

Read more...

Source: Irish Independent, 15/11/12

Posted by drugsdotie on 11/15 at 02:17 PM in
Share this:
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Digg
  • Del.icio.us
  • LinkedIn
  • E-mail
(0) Comments

Comments

Name:

Email:

URL:

Comments:

Remember my personal information

Notify me of follow-up comments?

Enter this word:


Here:

The HSE and Union of Students in Ireland (USI) ask students to think about drug safety measures when using club drugs
Harm reduction messages from the #SaferStudentNights campaign.
NewslettereBulletin
Poll Poll

Have you ever been impacted negatively by someone else's drug taking?