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Abstract

Purpose

The 3,4-methylenedioxymetamphetamine (MDMA) content in ecstasy tablets has increased enormously throughout Europe across the past decade. This study aims to determine whether this is caused by the production of “stronger” tablets (more mg MDMA per mg of tablet), or if tablets have simply been getting larger and heavier (more mg of tablet in total).

Design/methodology/approach

A data set of 31,716 ecstasy tablets obtained in 2012–2021 by 10 members of the Trans European Drug Information (TEDI) network was analysed.

Findings

The MDMA mass fraction in ecstasy tablets has remained virtually unchanged over the past 10 years, with increased MDMA contents being attributed almost exclusively to increased tablet weight. These trends seem to be uniform across Europe, despite varying sampling and analytical techniques being used by the TEDI participants. The study also shows that while tablet weight correlates perfectly with MDMA content on a yearly basis, wide variations in the MDMA mass fraction make such relations irrelevant for determining the MDMA content of individual tablets.

Research limitations/implications

These results provide new opportunities for harm reduction, given that size is a tangible and apparently accurate characteristic to emphasise that one tablet does not simply equate to one dose. This is particularly useful for harm reduction services without the resources for in-house quantification of large numbers of ecstasy tablets, although the results of this study also show that chemical analysis remains crucial for accurate personalised harm reduction.

Originality/value

The findings are both new and pertinent, providing a novel insight into the market dynamics of ecstasy tablet production at a transnational level.

Details

Drugs, Habits and Social Policy, vol. 23 no. 3
Type: Research Article
ISSN: 2752-6739

Keywords

Article
Publication date: 1 April 1956

N.J. Read

Calcium plumbate constitutes an important and novel addition to the few existing rust‐inhibitive pigments for the protection of iron and steel. Like red lead it provides…

Abstract

Calcium plumbate constitutes an important and novel addition to the few existing rust‐inhibitive pigments for the protection of iron and steel. Like red lead it provides protection by a combination of basic and oxidising characteristics, as well as film‐forming properties by interaction with linseed oil. It is believed to passify both cathodic and anodic areas on iron and steel, and in this respect differs from other rust‐inhibitive pigments. In practice, it shows the behaviour which on theoretical grounds might be expected to be associated with this type of inhibition. Linseed oil paints based on calcium plumbate have been found to be remarkably free from any tendency to crack, and their adhesion on galvanised iron and timber suggests the value of suck paints as primers with a wide variety of applications.

Details

Anti-Corrosion Methods and Materials, vol. 3 no. 4
Type: Research Article
ISSN: 0003-5599

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