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Evidence is growing that pill testing encourages young people to reconsider their drug use—and new forms of testing can provide even more benefits.

In 2014, I wrote an article for The Conversation outlining six reasons why Australia should pilot testing. Those reasons included:

  • strong public support for such measures, including among
  • evidence of impact on the black market
  • impact on consumption choices in a less harmful direction
  • potential to be used for early warning systems
  • opportunity to provide education, information and support to people who may be at risk of harm
  • data opportunities for improved understanding of the drug market

Four years on, those six reasons still hold today. In fact, we now have stronger evidence regarding the positive impacts of pill testing on young people's drug consumption behaviour. In a study from the UK published just before Christmas, 20% of service users disposed of substances when the drug testing service revealed the substance to be other than what had been intended to be purchased. A further two-thirds of UK festival goers whose samples did not match their intended purchase disposed of further substances (Measham, 2018). This is the clearest evidence we have of behaviour change as a result of pill testing services at festivals. There is no reason to suspect that Australian festival goers are significantly different from UK festival goers.

Indeed, our confidence in the positive impact of pill testing is substantially increased with the first Australian pilot – held at the Groovin the Moo festival in Canberra in April, 2018 (Makkai et al., 2018). The independent evaluation revealed that 35% of patrons who had their drug tested indicated that they would change their behaviour as a result (including 18% who indicated they would not consume the drug, and 12% who would consume less). There are no reports across any of the services of increases in as a result of pill testing services.

In other research conducted since the original 2014 piece, a survey of Australian festival goers in 2016 (Barratt et al., 2018) revealed that 94% of patrons would use a service if it were available, and would be willing to wait up to an hour for the results (80%). And data indicate intended users value the importance of the service and are committed to pill testing, with one-third of the respondents willing to provide a whole tablet for testing (Barratt et al., 2018).

Australia is lagging behind other nations. There has been an exponential increase in the number of pill testing services across developed nations in the last five years (Barratt et al., 2018). The opportunity to provide accurate information, including the message that 'no drug is safe' has been a feature of all the pill testing services. Dissemination goes well beyond the individual service users – 90% of service users at the Groovin the Moo pill testing pilot said they would tell friends of the results. In this way both the formal results and the informal network of communications can increase the likelihood that particularly dangerous substances are not consumed.

There are many different models for pill testing. This includes fixed sites in central locations (such as at transport hubs, or in community centres providing other healthcare check-ups and support services), pop-ups at festivals and music events, postal services, and in clubs. Australia is in an ideal position to pilot a number of different models and approaches – each providing an opportunity to learn more and increase the rigour of the research evidence.

But it is not a panacea – all harm reduction services need to balance the benefits and the risks. On the evidence so far, the risks of pill testing are extremely low – there is no evidence showing increased use of drugs with the presence of pill testing, and strong evidence of reduced consumption in association with pill testing. But nonetheless, some young people use drugs precisely because it is risky – and the availability of cannot guarantee that no more deaths will occur, just like the introduction of seatbelts and reduced speed limits has not guaranteed a zero road toll. But not introducing measures that in 2019 have a solid base is to treat young people's lives as somehow less important, or less worthy of care and support.

More information: Fiona Catherine Measham. Drug safety testing, disposals and dealing in an English field: Exploring the operational and behavioural outcomes of the UK's first onsite 'drug checking' service, International Journal of Drug Policy (2018). DOI: 10.1016/j.drugpo.2018.11.001

Monica J. Barratt et al. Pill testing or drug checking in Australia: Acceptability of service design features, Drug and Alcohol Review (2017). DOI: 10.1111/dar.12576

Global review of drug checking services operating in 2017. ndarc.med.unsw.edu.au/sites/de … arc/resources/Global%20review%20of%20drug%20checking%20services%20operating%20in%202017.pdf

Journal information: International Journal of Drug Policy , Drug and Alcohol Review