NEWS FLASH – illegal “bathtub drugs” are dangerous

mdma, molly, drugs

 

The party drug that sent 10 Wesleyan students to the hospital is more dangerous than people realize

At least 10 students at Wesleyan University and two visitors to the school were hospitalized this weekend after reportedly overdosing on “Molly,” a party drug users often consider to be the purest form of Ecstasy.

Both Ecstasy and Molly usually contain MDMA, 3,4- methylenedioxymethamphetamine, a psychedelic drug associated with euphoria. They’re typically ingested in different forms, though. Ecstasy, most often associated with nightclub culture in the 1980s and 90s, is taken as a pill, while Molly is commonly used as a powder.

In the last decade, Ecstasy came back to clubs in a rebranded form known as Molly that was pushed as a “gentler, more approachable drug,” as The New York Times reported. However, the common understanding of Molly as somehow safer than Ecstasy is likely baseless.

“You’re fooling yourself if you think it’s somehow safer because it’s sold in powdered form,” Harvard University psychiatrist John Halpern, who has conducted several MDMA studies, told The Times.

Molly gained notoriety in 2013 as it grew in popularity, culminating in the deaths of two concert attendees at the Electric Zoo music festival that were attributed to the drug.

Reuters/ DEA Ecstasy pills, which contain MDMA as their main chemical, are pictured in this undated handout photo courtesy of the United States Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA).

The drug known as Molly is particularly dangerous because it often doesn’t contain any MDMA at all and instead contains “a toxic mixture of lab-created chemicals,” as CNN reported in 2013. These chemicals are designed to mimic how MDMA effects the body, according to CNN, and produce “euphoric highs” for users.

“Molly is dangerous because of the toxic mix of unknown chemicals; users have no idea what they’re taking or at what dose. Unlike MDMA and other illegal drugs that have known effects on the body, the formulas for these synthetic drugs keep changing, and they’re manufactured with no regard to how they affect the user,” CNN reported.

The drug’s synthetic makeup has become potentially life threatening for people taking Molly, especially if they believe they’re receiving an unfiltered version of MDMA.

“You’re playing Russian roulette if you take these compounds because we’re seeing significant batch-to-batch variances,” a Drug Enforcement Administration administrator told CNN.

At Wesleyan, for example, the local Middletown, Connecticut police chief described the Molly on campus as a “bad batch,” the Associated Press reports. The students would likely have no way of knowing what exactly they were putting into their bodies.

As of Monday, eight remained hospitalized, the university said. Mark Neavyn, chief of toxicology at Hartford Hospital, where several students are being treated, told the Associated Press they are testing the Wesleyan students to determine what drugs they actually ingested.

“When we see these people in the emergency department and they claim to have taken Molly, we don’t pay attention to that word anymore. It’s so commonly not MDMA, we just start from square one and say it’s some sort of drug abuse,” Neavyn said.

The doctor’s process echoes the years-long controversy surrounding how drug users view Molly.

“Anyone can call something Molly to try to make sound less harmful,” one DEA agent told The Times in 2013. “But it can be anything.”

3 Responses

  1. As with most substances, effects and outcomes depend as much on the purpose and the user as on the drug itself (ruling out ‘bad batches’ and other drugs passed off as something they are not).
    I think MMJ and opiates are perfect examples of this. While MMJ does nothing for MY pain other than make me more aware of every little twitch, spasm, throb, stab, etc for those who benefit from it more power to them. In the case of MDMA?

    I recall reading something interesting yrs ago in regards to MDMA and PTSD.
    I was dealing w/ PTSD due to house fire and the loss of my dogs. While I have never ingested MDMA, ecstasy, or MOLLY, I can’t help but wonder……………http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3122379/
    While the sample size was small the outcomes in comparison were staggering. Also of interest:
    http://thedea.org/therapy.html

    After reading how ‘bad’ this drug is some will come to the conclusion that we need to ‘crack down’ harder on this and other dangerous drugs. Others, myself included, conclude that young people will experiment so why put them at risk, legalize and let them know what the hell it is they are ingesting. To politicians its all about the kids, supposedly, so if it IS, let them use w/ care not reckless abandon.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zyXOzGv3mII Drugs Inc-Molly Madness
    Have lost much respect for National Geographic after watching this program and others like it on similar ‘drug problems’. They never once address taking the power and money out of the hands of criminals even as the LE they interview infer the futility of their efforts in ‘stopping drugs’.
    * @25 min mark analysis of ‘molly’. Sad part too as it mentions that the sassafras oil used to make ‘molly’ comes from an endangered tree.

  2. These are the REAL drug problems. Our scripts for legitimate chronic pain are not putting people in the hospital like that. MDMA is so dangerous, Esp in the different non pure MDMA subsitutes. You can go on Craigslist and actually order this crap! Scary!!!!

  3. Some things parents should teach before college. They should be charged as criminals and made to pay the bills.

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