• Pill‐testing as a harm reduction strategy: time to have the conversation

    Evidence suggests that zero tolerance policies do not work and pill‐testing provides a useful tool for both direct harm reduction through the identification of dangerous illicit drugs containing new psychoactive substances or unusual dosages, as well as indirect harm reduction through the increased education of a hard‐to‐reach group of drug users. […]

  • Undying love fuels grieving parents’ push for pill-testing

    And they want drug checking. Would it have saved Josh? The Tams can’t be sure. But it might have. “The first thing the (counsellors) would have said to him was, ‘Mate, you’re struggling with the heat, do you realise what MDMA will do to your body?’” says Julie. They would have talked him through the dangers. […]

  • Australia’s drug laws are preventing people from seeking help for addiction

    Mr Gough said when people are stigmatised and discriminated against it becomes internalised – resulting in people thinking they don’t deserve any services. “So what I see is people who are disengaging with society because their problematic drug use is causing social isolation,” he said. “Really everyone has a different situation and a different set of problems but people who…

  • Ice inquiry lawyers back decriminalisation of drug use

    The personal use of ice and other illicit drugs would be decriminalised in NSW under a public health-focused drug policy backed by lawyers assisting the special commission of inquiry into ice. Under the potential recommendations of the inquiry, pill testing would also be trialled and the use of medically supervised drug consumption rooms would be expanded in NSW. […]

  • “Gladys Berejiklian is clearly putting politics before lives”: Why I support pill testing

    To refute the benefits of harm minimisation in terms of pill testing is not just dangerously irresponsible, it is quite frankly, embarrassing.  Premier Gladys Berejiklian is clearly putting politics before the lives of (mostly) young Australians by blocking pill testing.  Let alone ignoring the recommendations of the Deputy Coroner.  This is irrefutable.  […]

  • Canberra laws legalising cannabis breach international law, United Nations warns

    ACT Chief Minister Andrew Barr defended the laws that come into effect on January 31, 2020, saying the supply and traffic of cannabis will remain illegal and the UN should turn its attention elsewhere. “Canada, Colorado and California have cannabis legalisation laws that are much more expansive than the laws passed by the ACT Legislative Assembly last month,” Mr Barr said.…

  • Mother calls for Australia to follow ACT’s lead with festival pill testing service

    Ms Buccianti is imploring every state and territory to follow the ACT’s lead, with the firm belief that pill testing would have saved her son’s life. “I believe that if a pill testing service had been available, he would still be alive,” she said. “He was naive to think that the acid he took was the same stuff he had taken…

  • Richmond’s safe-injecting room: Controversy overshadows positive community impact

    It bears repeating in this context that MSIR alone safely managed 1232 overdoses in its first year. This gives us a sense of just one of the ways the service is making a vital contribution to the Australian community. Unfortunately, critical reactions such as those we have seen this past week can introduce new problems and risks, and may risk…

  • Opinion: ‘Kids don’t deserve to die for making a mistake’

    I join the families of those young people who have lost their lives as a result of illegal drug use at music festivals in urging the premiere to allow pill testing sites to be set up at music festivals this summer to prevent further deaths, not in place of advising young people not to use illegal drugs, but in addition…

  • NSW police strip-search data shows lowest drug prosecution rate in seven years

    More than two-thirds of strip searches carried out by NSW police fail to find any illicit drugs, according to data obtained by the ABC. The data also shows less than 0.5 per cent of drug searches undertaken following detection by a police dog result in drug prosecutions. MS Greens’ David Shoebridge said the numbers strengthened his call to ban the practice.…