Los servicios ambulantes de análisis de éxtasis podrían reducir los riesgos en conciertos y raves

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Los servicios ambulantes de análisis de éxtasis podrían reducir los riesgos en conciertos y raves

31 julio 2017

Un equipo científico de la Universidad Johns Hopkins afirma que las personas que usan drogas con fines recreativos quizá optarían por no tomarlas si supieran que las píldoras están adulteradas.

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Johns Hopkins scientists report that data collected over five years by volunteers who tested pills free of charge at music festivals and raves across the United States suggest that at least some recreational users of drugs may choose not to take them if tests show the pills are adulterated or fake.

"People would be safest not taking any street drugs at all, but if free, no-fault testing can reduce deaths and other catastrophic consequences, it may be a service worth having," says Matthew W. Johnson, Ph.D., associate professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. "Our results suggest that some people will reject taking a pill to get high if it doesn't contain what they thought it did, or has harmful additives."

Johnson says his team's research highlights the potential public health value of reducing the risks of drug use, and says the development of additional ways to assess more dangerous street drugs, such as fentanyl and carfentanil, might offer a means of reducing the growing epidemic of fatalities associated with them.

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