• Int. J. Drug Policy · Jan 2018

    Nine reasons why ecstasy is not quite what it used to be.

    • Jane Mounteney, Paul Griffiths, Alessandra Bo, Andrew Cunningham, Joao Matias, and Alessandro Pirona.
    • European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction (EMCDDA), Praça Europa 1, Cais do Sodré, 1249-289 Lisbon, Portugal(1). Electronic address: Jane.Mounteney@emcdda.europa.eu.
    • Int. J. Drug Policy. 2018 Jan 1; 51: 36-41.

    AbstractThis paper explores the recent resurgence in use of ecstasy/MDMA in Europe and highlights keys areas of continuity and divergence between the ecstasy market of the 1990s and the current MDMA market. Based on a scoping study involving a targeted multi-source data collection exercise on MDMA, it highlights nine areas that have undergone some level of change, linked with both supply and demand for the drug. Factors discussed include: innovation in production techniques; changes in precursor chemical availability; the role of online markets; competition with other stimulants and new psychoactive substances; the increased availability of high-strength MDMA; and the shift from subcultural towards more mainstream use of the drug. The paper proposes that the MDMA on Europe's contemporary market is in some respects a third generation product with a different consumer profile, with implications that responses developed at the time of the drug's earlier iteration, may be in need of a review and revamp.Copyright © 2017 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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