
New research into聽聽found that 64 people died across the country from July 2000 until the end of 2019.
罢丑别听聽report聽was released聽after聽a mass overdose聽at Naarm/Melbourne鈥檚 Hardmission Festival on January 6,聽renewing聽calls for pill testing to be made legal in Victoria and New South Wales.
After promising reforms,聽New South Wales Premier Chris Minns has spent the last six months聽聽election promises, including聽to hold a drug summit. He 丑补蝉听.
罢丑别听new study 鈥渁imed to determine the frequency of deaths involving alcohol and other drugs at music festivals in Australia and to identify potential risk factors that may inform future harm reduction strategies鈥.
The five聽researchers found that the drug-related deaths were 鈥減otentially preventable鈥 if harm reduction interventions, such as drug-checking services, had been available.聽The majority of聽festival deaths were attributable to MDMA toxicity.
Partying blind
The report outlined that drug use among聽festival-goers is 鈥渄isproportionately high compared with the general population鈥.聽It said聽that聽drug-related harms聽at such events are聽鈥渘ot uncommon鈥.
Polysubstance use聽鈥斅爐he use of a number of psychoactive substances at the same time聽鈥斅爐ends to be a factor in the majority of drug-related incidents at events,聽the report said. The substances聽most likely to be involved in a drug harm incident聽are聽overwhelmingly alcohol, followed by MDMA.
Novel psychoactive substances (NPS), 鈥渟ynthetic molecules鈥,聽designed to reproduce the effects of prohibited traditional drugs, are another factor,聽and can often be more harmful,聽the report said.
There was a聽聽multiple overdose event聽at Melbourne鈥檚 Chapel Street nightclub precinct in January 2017:聽Three people died and 20 were hospitalised due to a toxic batch of MDMA or ecstacy caps, which turned out to contain the聽NPS NBOMe, which has strong hallucinogenic properties.
The United Nations Office of Drugs and Crime聽,聽that聽monitors the emergence of NPS,聽聽between June 2013 and November 2023 鈥 a new drug roughly every week.
鈥淒rug checking, or pill testing, allows the general public to submit drugs for toxicological analysis indicating the contents, dose, and purity of pills and powders, which may reveal potentially dangerous substances, promoting drug disposal and safer drug use,鈥 the report said.
Harm reduction experts have pointed out that drug checking results in reduced drug use, as those who utilise such services and are informed that the聽聽could potentially be harmful, usually dispose of them.
Preventable deaths
Of the 64 drug-related deaths since July 2000, 74% were men聽of聽a median age of 23. Deaths are also more likely聽in inner city locations.
On average, three people died in drug-related circumstances each聽year. The majority聽happen聽in NSW, followed by Victoria: neither state聽allows聽pill testing.
Queensland authorised聽聽but they聽are yet to begin.
Instead, governments employ police and private security services to crack down on drug use.聽
鈥淓vidence supporting the use of specific law enforcement approaches at concerts and festivals is limited, with recent studies questioning their potential effectiveness in reducing purchase, supply, use or harm related to drugs,鈥 the report聽said.
Drug detection dogs have been widely used at music festivals over the last two decades,聽despite multiple studies suggesting their presence increases drug-death risks, the report聽said.
Greens Senator聽David Shoebridge sourced multiple sets of police statistics showing that searches resulting from a dog indication leads to nothing being found聽.
He聽obtained data revealing that dogs are increasingly being accompanied by聽.
When聽festival-goers聽are聽confronted by police聽and dogs it聽can lead to聽dangerous drug-taking behaviour, such as panicking and swallowing the drugs at once, taking an excessive amount prior to arriving at an event or concealing substances in body cavities.
Dispelling the myths
鈥淐ountries such as the Netherlands have used drug checking for over three decades to understand the dynamic recreational drug market, providing toxicosurveillance data to the European Union Early Warning System, as part of the Drug Information and Monitoring System (DIMS),鈥 the report said.
Australia has one drug checking service 鈥 the CANTest facility in the ACT.聽
The report noted聽that 鈥渃ritics have questioned the analytical limitations of drug checking and its role in condoning drug use or providing patrons with a false sense of security over the contents of their drugs鈥.
Those critics can be found among聽the ranks of NSW Labor and the Coalition.
While the trial of pill testing at the CANTest facility聽has now been extended due to its success,聽NSW MPs聽prefer to bury their heads in the sand.
Report co-author Dr David Caldicott told聽聽at the time of CANTest鈥檚 unveiling聽that 鈥渢he service does not act as a 鈥榟oney-pot鈥, as often misrepresented, and, in fact, it often results in change of behaviour, in a healthy way, regarding drug use鈥.
鈥淭he average MDMA concentration among these deaths was above a range usually associated with toxicity, highlighting an opportunity for the prevention of harm,鈥 the report聽set聽out.聽Services also serve聽as a point of contact for medical professionals and people who use drugs.
Drug-checking services can聽be a聽point of contact for medical professionals and people who use drugs. Festival-goers can discuss drug use with staff, counsellors are available for those who want them and bins are on hand for those who decide not to take the risk.聽
鈥淯nlike many existing toxicosurveillance and harm reduction strategies, drug checking enables the detection of dangerous products before they are consumed, deterring use and preventing harm,鈥 the report concluded.
[Paul Gregoire writes for聽聽where this article was first published.]