Monday, July 7, 2014

Australia Is the Party Drug Capital of the World

Drugs
Police officers show pills of ecstasy, stamps laced with LSD and other drugs seized during an operation on the outskirts of Rome, Tuesday Novermber 2, 1999.

Image: AP Photo/Isidoro Pitera'/Associated Press

Australians are popping more ecstasy pills than any other country in the world, according to the United Nations World Drug Report.

The global 2014 report shows the dramatic rise of all types of recreational drug users in Australia. The country is rated first for ecstasy use, third for methamphetamine consumption, fourth for cocaine snorting and seventh for cannabis smoking when compared with the rest of the world.

According to the report, ecstasy use is on the decline from previous years, but Australia is now seeing a dramatic “increase in the consumption of cannabis, cocaine, hallucinogens, and solvents and inhalants”.

Cocaine use hasn’t increased as rapidly as other illicit drugs, likely due to the high street price of the party stimulant - close to $AUD300 ($280).

Drug experts say economical and social conditions in Australia are contributing to the shocking rise of illicit drug use.

Australian Drug Law Reform Foundation president Dr Alex Wodak told News Limited the rise can be attributed to a new generation of cashed-up social users and also a growing underclass.

“There is certainly greater demand for drugs and that is likely because of economic and social conditions.

“People on one hand have more money to spend and on the other there are more people who are at risk â€" and those that are at risk are getting worse because of high unemployment, poor job prospects, lack of optimism,’’ Dr Wodak told the Daily Telegraph.

The report also reveals Australians are ranked second only to the US in the use of prescription painkillers such as codeine and morphine.

In the five main countries surveyed, the report claims illicit drug use among men is higher but the illegal use of pharmaceutical drugs “is nearly equivalent, if not higher among women”.

“Nearly all drug use surveys indicate that men are more likely than women to use drugs such as opiates and cannabis,” the report said. “However the gender gap shrinks when data on the misuse of pharmaceuticals are considered.”

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