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This campaign by The Press intends to make the drug mephedrone illegal.
The drug, commonly known as bubbles, meow, meow or M-CAT, which can cost as little as £3 a dose, is becoming increasingly popular among young people in North and East Yorkshire, but its effects can be devastating.
Phone Jennifer Bell at The Press on 01904 653051 ext 315 or email jennifer.bell@thepress.co.uk for further details.
10:05am Saturday 27th March 2010 in
GORDON Brown has given his strongest hint yet that The Press will win its campaign to have the danger drug mephedrone banned after the Prime Minister is handed a crucial report from advisors on Monday.
Mr Brown has suggested the Advisory Council On The Misuse Of Drugs will recommend that mephedrone should be made a Class B drug.
The move follows a number of deaths linked to the “legal high” including that of 24-year-old Lois Waters, whose inquest was opened and adjourned in Scarborough yesterday.
Other fatalities include Louis Wainright, 18, who died in the Scunthorpe area last week, and the latest victim – Joslyne Marie Cockburn, 18, – who died after a night out in Newcastle.
Yesterday, York MP Hugh Bayley signed a Parliamentary motion calling on the Government to bring forward an urgent review of mephedrone. He said: “It is clear that this substance is very dangerous, and can have tragic consequences. I want the Government to urgently review mephedrone to make it a controlled substance and to better educate young people about the dangers of using ‘legal highs’.
“The Government and the independent drugs advisory group need to act fast to prevent any further tragedies.”
Mephedrone comes in crystal, powder, capsule or liquid form and is more commonly known as meow, bubbles, M-CAT or 4-MMC. It has led to a rising number of users in the city being rushed to the accident and emergency department at York Hospital. Symptoms include paranoia, anxiety, palpitations, increased heart rate and convulsions. A spokesperson for York Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust said: “We have treated a number of people over the past few months that have taken this drug, and we are continuing to see a handful of people a week in our emergency department, mainly at weekends.”
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