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Rise in ‘designer drugs’ poses serious health risk: UN report

The report from the International Narcotics Control Board said Europe alone almost one new substance is appearing every week.

Designer drugs are multiplying at a worrying rate and increasingly sending users to hospital, a UN-affiliated report has said, calling for international efforts to stem the spread of these substances.
“In recent years, there has been an unprecedented surge in the abuse of new psychoactive substances,” often called “legal highs” or “designer drugs,” the Vienna-based International Narcotics Control Board (INCB) said in its annual report.

“In Europe alone almost one new substance is appearing every week. Previously, between 2000 and 2005 there were an average of five notifications of new substances per year,” added INCB head Raymond Yans.

Experts estimate thousands of such drugs currently exist on the market, the report said.

“As abuse of these substances has increased, so too has the number of users who have experienced grave health consequences or even suffered death due to exposure to them,” it went on, pointing to “marked increases in emergency room visits for adverse health reactions” and “significant increases in calls to poison treatment centres.”

Aggravating the problem further was the fact that these drugs were not subject to international control regimes and were readily available on the Internet, requiring states and international institutions to find new ways to identify the drugs and stop their distribution, the UN-affiliated INCB said.

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Source: AFP, thejournal.ie, 06/03/13

Posted by drugsdotie on 03/06 at 02:31 PM in
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