Moratorium, Analysis of New Party Pills Urged
NEW ZEALAND DRUG FOUNDATION MEDIA RELEASE
31 March 2008
DRUG FOUNDATION URGES MORATORIUM AND INDEPENDENT
ANALYSIS OF NEW PARTY
PILLS
On the eve of the BZP party
pill ban, the New Zealand Drug Foundation
has called for
a voluntary moratorium on sales of all new non-BZP
party
pills until an independent analysis has been
carried out to determine
their risk.
>From tomorrow, it
will be illegal to manufacture and sell BZP-based
party
pills, and a six-month amnesty is in place for personal
possession
and use. It is expected that the party pill
industry will introduce
non-BZP products from this date.
New BZP-free products are already
being advertised online
by some retailers.
However, the Drug Foundation warns
there is no information about what is
in the new products
or their health effects, and that consumers' health
could
be severely compromised. The foundation is calling for
retailers
to voluntarily withhold the new products from
sale until an independent
analysis is undertaken to
determine exactly what is in them, and whether
there are
any health risks from the various ingredients.
"This is
the same risky situation we had when BZP pills were
first
introduced. We don't know what's in them, we don't
know their effects
and so we aren't able to provide good
health and safety advice to
consumers. We cannot rely on
the industry to provide unbiased
information," said Ross
Bell, Drug Foundation Executive Director.
"These new
products have zero regulations over them. This means
they
can be sold from anywhere, including the corner
dairy, to anyone,
including people under 18 years old.
There is no requirement for the
products to have health
and safety labelling, so consumers won't have a
clue
what's in them or their possible health effects. Once more,
the
law is lagging behind what is happening in the
marketplace."
The Drug Foundation is asking the
government's independent Expert
Advisory Committee on
Drugs to review the new products and provide
advice on
how they should be regulated.
The Drug Foundation will
recommend to the EACD that these products be
classified
as "Restricted Substances" under the Misuse of Drugs
Act,
which provides controls such as a sales restriction
to people over 18
years and bans some
advertising.
"While we're in this state of regulatory
limbo, we urge retailers to
show some responsibility and
postpone sales of the new pills until an
independent
review is complete and made available to the
public."
ENDS