{"id":1048,"date":"2020-11-12T23:33:09","date_gmt":"2020-11-12T22:33:09","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/svjmedia.nl\/internationaljournalism\/?p=1048"},"modified":"2020-11-30T10:44:43","modified_gmt":"2020-11-30T09:44:43","slug":"new-dutch-bill-plans-put-a-stop-to-risky-designer-drugs","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/svjmedia.nl\/internationaljournalism\/1048\/new-dutch-bill-plans-put-a-stop-to-risky-designer-drugs\/","title":{"rendered":"New Dutch bill plans to put a stop to risky \u2018designer drugs\u2019"},"content":{"rendered":"
A new Dutch bill plans to prohibit entire groups of new psychoactive substances (NPS), instead of just one specific substance. Minister of Justice and Safety, Ferdinand Grapperhaus, plans on putting these NPS-groups on the opium list, making it illegal for vendors to sell them. As of now, many of these different types of drugs are sold online as \u2018research chemicals\u2019. Will this new bill put a stop to the sale of \u2018legal drugs\u2019 on the internet?<\/strong><\/p>\n Designer drugs As of now most of these designer drugs in the Netherlands are being sold online \u2018legally\u2019 by companies that are registered to the chamber of commerce. To make sure that they are not liable, however, they call these drugs \u2018research chemicals\u2019 and they mention multiple times on their websites that these substances are \u2018for research purposes only and not for human consumption\u2019, but of course their buyers know better than that. Using these \u2018research chemicals\u2019, however, comes at a price. Because these substances are new and relatively unknown, little to no research has been done, making its users their own personal guinea pigs. Experiences are shared online on blogs and forums, with no scientific research to back this up.<\/p>\n XTC-light<\/strong> It didn\u2019t take long for the Netherlands Institute for Mental Health and Addiction (Trimbos) to receive more and more reports of health incidents after using 4-FA, ranging from headaches to brain haemorrhages and heart problems. Not long after that, in 2017, 4-FA was added to the opium list, prohibiting production, trade and sale. This proved to be effective, because according to research conducted by Trimbos<\/a> about a third of users stopped taking the drug after its prohibition, partially because of the negative media-attention it received. Still a small group of people switched over to a drug similar to 4-FA, called 4-FMA, explains Laura Smit-Rigter, coordinator of the Drugs Information and Monitoring System at the Trimbos Institute. \u201cThis because 4-FMA is not on the opium list yet, because of the change in molecular structure. Still a lot of people have been scared straight by the incidents that happened with 4-FA.\u201d<\/p>\n Jochen Schrooten, criminologist and staff member Prevention and Risk Reduction in Nightlife at the Flemish Centre of Expertise for Alcohol and other Drugs (VAD) explains how and why Belgium implemented this same law back in 2017.<\/p>\n\n
\n<\/strong>New psychoactive substances are a very wide concept, it compromises a very large number of substances (drugs), changing continually. According to the European Drug Report 2020<\/a> over 50 new types drugs have been introduced yearly, since 2012. These substances range from different types of stimulants, opioids, synthetic cannabinoids, benzodiazepines, hallucinogens and dissociatives.<\/p>\n
\nAn infamous example is the party drug 4-FA\/4-FMP, also known as 4-fluoramphetamine, which gained popularity in the Netherlands around 2016 because it was being advertised as \u2018XTC-light\u2019. With users reporting a clearer head and more control than they had while using ecstasy, many saw it as the ideal party drug. Because 4-FA was a \u2018new psychoactive substance\u2019, it was not yet listed on the Dutch opium list, making it technically \u2018legal\u2019. This made it possible for users to buy it online and get it delivered to their house by mail within just a matter of days.<\/p>\n