Ban on party-pills encouraging use of class A drugs - reseacher

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Sat, 13 Jun 2009 12:00a.m.

Ecstasy use has increased since the banning of party-pills

Ecstasy use has increased since the banning of party-pills

The prohibition of party-pills could be encouraging people into using stronger drugs according to researchers.

Experts say a ban on the pills containing the ingredient BZP has been effective since it was introduced last year, but there are signs it is fuelling a surge in the use of ecstasy.

A law change in April last year made it illegal to sell party pills containing BZP closing down an industry that sprung up around making and selling the drugs.

 

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Comments

03 Jul 2009 04:05p.m.

will wrote:

while it is true that outlawing softer drugs will encourage harder ones i don't see the direct link between bzp and ecstasy i hope this is not another campaign to crack down on use cos it wont work and we all know that compared to alcohol and ciggs this drug is harmless

14 Jun 2009 06:25p.m.

chris wrote:

Expected!