• Why the fly-spray and toxic waste hysteria on synthetics has to stop

    Instead of “metaphor” and melodrama we need facts. The whole field is littered with hyperbole, which is precisely what makes people overly cynical and no longer receptive to harm reduction messaging. When you tell a generation that MDMA is eating a hole in their brain and that turns out to be bullshit, they’re not interested in whatever legitimately harmful properties…

  • NZ: Health Minister David Clark in favour of liberalising drug laws

    Health Minister David Clark is personally in favour of more liberal drug laws because prohibition has not worked in the past. But Clark would not commit to abiding by the result of any referendum on loosening laws around cannabis use, saying he preferred to wait for advice from his colleagues. “I think it’s highly likely that that’s the course we…

  • Drug users in outer Sydney need another medically supervised consumption room

    Government and public health officials in Melbourne have recently agreed to the establishment of an injecting centre in their city, citing the success of the Kings Cross facility. It now seems entirely appropriate that a city as large, expansive and diverse as Sydney, and with its sizeable number of injecting drug users, should have the benefit of another one of…

  • Drug users shouldn’t be treated like criminals

    When I am asked by people at the ceremony why people using drugs are treated as criminals and pursued by the law, I have to be honest and say I don’t know why, in the face of all the evidence, we have governments that still prefer to punish rather than help. […]

  • Media coverage of methamphetamine use “demonising”

    SA Network of Drug and Alcohol Services executive director Michael White said claims methamphetamine was the most commonly used drug in SA were misleading. White expressed concern that the Business SA report and subsequent media coverage could have a harmful impact on methamphetamine users seeking treatment. […]

  • Newly Released Prisoners Are 40 Times More Likely to Overdose Than the General Population

    The authors call for the use of buprenorphine and methadone in prisons and distribution of the overdose reversal drug naloxone prior to release. They also note the need for more robust reentry services, as challenges such as finding a job, housing, or health care could “serve as an impetus for substance abuse.” […]

  • Draconian drug laws should be changed

    Drug law reform has been gaining significant media attention, with the myths surrounding drug driving tests and sniffer dogs being exposed, as well as the successes of festival pill testing schemes. Those in favour of drug law reform seek harm minimisation and liberation from outdated laws, to stop drug laws being used as a pretence to harass the working-class, Aboriginal…

  • Why opioid dependence treatment is hampered

    Treatment for opioid dependence is hampered by lack of availability, acceptability and affordability of treatment for affected Australians, say Angelo Pricolo, Harm Reduction Australia and ScriptWise. A new report, A Better System for Better Outcomes, outlines recommendations from a recent National Medicated Assisted Treatment for Opioid Dependence Summit hosted by the two national organisations. […]

  • NZ: Summer festival drug testing finds risky new drugs

    Drug checking is gaining support overseas, with Australia’s ACT government planning to expand pill testing at events after a successful trial in May, and the UK Home Office last week stating that drug checking services are legal and it will not stand in the way of initiatives there. Allison believes it’s time the New Zealand government acted to support drug…

  • Support For Medical Cannabis In New Zealand Continues To Grow

    The latest poll carried out by The Drug Foundation found  89 percent of those surveyed believe medical cannabis should be legal or decriminalised for patients a terminal illness, up significantly on its 2017 survey (81%). 87 percent said it should be available for pain relief (78 percent in 2017). […]