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Wales Online
Wales Online
Health
Abbie Wightwick

How Covid and Brexit led to drug users being sold fake ecstasy

A shortage of recreational drugs caused by the pandemic meant festivalgoers were sold fake MDMA. A new study highlighted the effect of Brexit and Covid on the trade in the illegal party drug, also known as ecstasy, amid warnings of the unknown health risks to drug users ahead of this year’s festival season.

Almost half of substances sold as MDMA at English festivals last year contained none, researchers found. The Loop, a UK drug checking charity, found that 45% of substances sold as MDMA at the festivals last year contained none – and instead contained other drugs such as caffeine or cathinones. In 2019, the comparable figure was just 7%.

The charity said it believes a combination of Brexit and Covid-19 lockdowns may have contributed to a sharp rise in “copycat” ecstasy last summer and warned of the health risks. The study, led by The Loop and including researchers from Cardiff University and the University of Liverpool, is published in the journal Drug Science, Policy and Law.

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“This study illustrates how cathinones are mis-sold as MDMA during periods of scarcity in the MDMA market,” said Dr Michael Pascoe, a Cardiff University research associate and co-lead author of the study. "Covid-19 lockdowns and the shutdown of UK nightlife led to a slump in demand for ‘party drugs’ and suppliers scaled back production. Then, as UK nightlife re-opened ahead of other European countries, demand outpaced supply.

“This was compounded by Brexit-related supply chain disruptions affecting distribution. During this unprecedented turbulence in the drug market substances that look like MDMA were mis-sold to unknowing customers.”

The study was based on the researchers’ test results from nearly 800 substances analysed at three summer festivals in England before and after the pandemic. The Loop operates a pop-up laboratory which analyses substances of concern. Monitoring changing drug trends allows The Loop to provide information and rapid alerts, including to festival paramedics and the general public, for the purposes of harm reduction.

Researchers for the charity found the presence of MDMA in samples sold as MDMA fell from 93% in 2019 to 55% in 2021. Yet while virtually absent in 2019 synthetic cathinones and caffeine each constituted approximately a fifth of 2021 MDMA samples. Synthetic cathinones are chemical cousins of amphetamines, such as speed, that rose to prominence from the late 2000s onward. In the UK cathinones such as mephedrone (Mcat) were once sold as ‘legal highs’.

Professor Fiona Measham, co-author from the University of Liverpool and director of The Loop, said: “The sharp rise in synthetic cathinone prevalence in the UK in the summer of 2021 coincided with a unique combination of events including Brexit and the reopening of nightlife after 16 months of lockdowns, months ahead of other European nations.

“This isn’t the first time we have seen cathinones being sold as ecstasy at UK events. In 2014, shortly after the banning of mephedrone, methylone made its debut on the UK drugs scene. After methylone was also banned N-ethylpentylone emerged in 2017. In the latest festival season three other cathinones reared their heads.”

Two of the three most common cathinones identified by The Loop in this study were legal in the Netherlands during the 2021 festival season though have since been banned. “Without laboratory tests, it’s impossible to tell what’s really in the drugs people purchase – and the pandemic and Brexit appears to have exacerbated this issue,” said Dr Pascoe.

“Rapid onsite testing, dissemination of alerts, harm reduction information, and associated risk communications through media and social media channels provide vital ways to inform drug-users, practitioners, and policy-makers to help reduce drug-related harms at festivals and beyond.” Professor Measham added: “The Loop’s testing service facilitates more informed decision-making. We do not encourage or assist drug use and always highlight that no test can tell whether a substance is ‘safe’ to take.”

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