There was a young man
named Henry Kwan who lived in Australia with his family. At 17 years
old he could speak six languages fluently and talked about becoming a
doctor or lawyer upon entering the university. Preparing for his
final exams, he was worried about getting the highest grades possible
and was feeling a high level of stress. When his mother and sister
left the house, he was quietly studying at his desk. When they
returned an hour later, he was agitated, started vomiting, had
difficulty doing anything physical, and began rocking back-and-forth
in a foetal position in front of the television. He suddenly decided
he wanted to fly and so dived head first off the balcony, after a
struggle in which his mother and sister tried to stop him by hanging
on to his feet and arms.1
There is a good chance you
have not heard of the substance that led to Henry’s behaviour and
death. Apparently, young Henry had bought a synthetic drug from a
fellow student because the student body was talking about how it
could help with studying. There is a likelihood that Henry thought he
was taking an herbal remedy to improve concentration, but instead he
was taking 25l-NBOMe which is a synthetic drug. This particular
substance was a hallucinogen that was determined to be 25 times more
powerful than LSD. It is no wonder that Henry thought he could fly.
The drug that killed Henry
is synthetic cannabis like Kronic (but it was chemically different).
Synthetic drug use is growing as easy access to supplies grows.
Synthetic drugs can be purchased online or over-the-counter at
tobacco, sex and convenience shops. To address the problem, NSW
temporarily banned the sale of 19 drugs to gain time and hopefully
prevent more tragedies like the death of Henry. The new law bans the
manufacturing, supplying and advertising of various synthetic drugs
that are psychoactive. During the ban, the government is taking a
couple of actions that will make the ban permanent. It plans on
adding 40 substances to its Schedule 1 prohibited drugs and adopting
a blanket ban on a class of drugs, which in this case is synthetic
psychoactive drugs.2
Stronger Case for
Workplace Drug Testing
There is a drug test that
can detect synthetic cannabis made with MDVP or “bath salts”.
However, employers are naturally concerned about all the other
synthetic drugs flowing into Australia. What about those? If drug
testing detects one designer drug, then what are they supposed to do
about all the other drugs people seem intent on taking? Their
concerns are valid, but drug users are not typically like Henry. For
one thing, he had no history of drug abuse and was not chasing a new
legal high. In fact, Henry believed in using natural herbs and not
medicines.
Also, poly drug use is
common among people who use any drug regularly. Methamphetamine users
are documented as typical poly drug users. The poly drug users are
prone to use alcohol as a way to control their “coming down” from
a high induced by other drugs. The 2007 National Drug Strategy
Household Survey reported that 87.3 percent of regular cannabis users
also consumer alcohol; 23.8 percent also used meth and
methamphetamines; 28.3 percent also used ecstasy; and 11.5 percent
also used cocaine or crack cocaine. Why would there be any different
assumption about polydrug use involving synthetic cannabis and
illicit drug use? Therefore, random drug testing programs in the
workplace that detects any of the illicit drugs will contribute to
ending the use of synthetic drugs in the workplace also, even if the
employer is unaware of the synthetic drug use because it is a
currently undetectable designer substance. The influx of synthetic
drugs makes an even stronger case for workplace drug testing.
Learning from Henry’s
Tragedy
What does Henry’s
experience teach employers? It teaches them that sudden, inexplicable
employee behaviours may indicate drug use and justify “for cause”
drug testing. Henry’s situation also taught employers that employee
drug education is critical because workers can get caught in the drug
trap by taking substances they are not familiar with and were not
prescribed. Finally, employers should educate workers on the
procedure for reporting odd co-worker behaviours or indications of
synthetic or illicit drugs in the workplace. What may seem harmless
could cost someone serious injury or even death.
The
synthetic drug manufacturers use exotic names for their products like
“Dancing Flames”, “Northern Lights” or “Fire”. What they
should have on the package is a skull and crossbones and the word
“Death”. Increased use of synthetic drugs by the Australian
population makes an even stronger case for drug and alcohol testing
in the workplace. CMM Technology (cmm.com.au/index.php)
has a complete line of drug testing
supplies and equipment that simplifies the process of keeping drugs –
all drugs – out of the workplace.
This article has been taken from : http://cmm.com.au/articles/keeping-synthetic-drugs-out-of-the-workplace/
No comments:
Post a Comment