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Shortall’s Departure Welcomed By Drug Expert

While the Roisin Shortall debate focuses on her relationship with Ministry For Health boss James Reilly, her handling of the National Drug Strategy has been criticised by Dublin-based addiction specialist Dr. Garrett McGovern. Also up for discussion when he meets Stuart Clark are the recent deaths of two young men in Kinsale.

Stuart Clark, 05 Oct 2012

“All the head shop ban succeeded in doing was driving the drug trade underground again where you’ve really no idea what you’re buying, and you can’t take something off the shelves if it proves to be genuinely dangerous,” he proffers. “The head shops weren’t perfect by any means but the products they sold, like Mephedrone, had a track record. You knew what it was, and what it was likely to do to you. The dosages in the pills tended not to vary too much and if you had problems you were able to tell people, ‘This is what I’ve taken.’

“It’s worth stressing that we don’t know yet what these two men died from. The toxicology reports aren’t back yet, so we’re merely speculating as to what was in these pills and whether they were the actual cause.”

Dr. McGovern’s “track record” comments aren’t likely to go down well with the Joe Duffy brigade, but official New Zealand government figures show that one of Mephedrone’s MDMA mimicking predecessors, BZP, was taken 26 million times with no fatalities. Although eventually banned there, it’s been classified as a Class D “low-risk substance.”

“The Irish government could have kept half-a-dozen substances like Mephedrone and BZP legal; researched them thoroughly and then issued guidelines as to their use,” he ventures. “Prohibition doesn’t make drugs magically disappear, as I’ve discovered with people presenting to me with issues surrounding heroin use. Before the head shop ban, very few of them were taking legal highs. Now that they’ve entered into the illegal drug chain, they are in sometimes substantial amounts. They’re buying them from the guy who also sells them their heroin, having no idea what they’re taking.”

People with heroin addiction issues can contact Dr. Garrett McGovern (01) 2916153. www.prioritymedicalclinic.ie



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