• Drug and alcohol review · May 2008

    Review

    The rise of methamphetamine in Southeast and East Asia.

    • Rebecca McKetin, Nicholas Kozel, Jeremy Douglas, Robert Ali, Balasingam Vicknasingam, Johannes Lund, and Jih-Heng Li.
    • National Drug and Alcohol Research Centre, University of New South Wales, Australia. r.mcketin@unsw.edu.au
    • Drug Alcohol Rev. 2008 May 1; 27 (3): 220-8.

    Introduction And AimsSoutheast and East Asia has become a global hub for methamphetamine production and trafficking over the past decade. This paper describes the rise of methamphetamine supply and to what extent use of the drug is occurring in the region.Method And DesignThe current review uses data collected through the Drug Abuse Information Network for Asia and the Pacific (DAINAP) and other available sources to analyse retrospectively methamphetamine trends within Southeast and East Asia.ResultsSoutheast and East Asia has experienced a methamphetamine epidemic in the past decade which began around 1997 and peaked in 2000-2001. While the situation has since stabilised in many countries, methamphetamine trafficking and use are still increasing in parts of the Mekong region and there is evidence of large-scale manufacture in Cambodia, Indonesia, Malaysia and the Philippines. Methamphetamine is typically smoked or ingested, but injection of the drug is apparent.ConclusionWhile the peak of the methamphetamine epidemic has passed in parts of Southeast and East Asia, attention is needed to minimise the potential consequences of spreading methamphetamine production, trafficking and use in the Mekong region and in the peninsular and archipelago of Southeast Asia.

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