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Crikey
Crikey
Health
Anton Nilsson

Drug testing services can save lives but NSW and Victoria stubbornly refuse to get on board

Australia’s two most populous states are yet to commit to offering drug testing services, despite calls by experts, advocates and coroners to do so. 

NSW Health Minister Ryan Park told Crikey he wasn’t personally convinced pill testing services should be offered in the state, but said an upcoming drug summit would look at reform “across the board”. 

“It’s one of the measures, but it’s not the only measure — everyone who works in these spaces will tell you there are a range of different measures,” Park told Crikey on Monday. 

Park’s comments come after two men aged in their 20s died in suspected overdoses at a music festival in Sydney at the weekend.

Victoria likewise hasn’t committed to offering drug testing, even though the state coroner recommended introducing the services last month.

State Coroner Judge John Cain recommended in the beginning of September that the state government “implement a drug checking service in the state of Victoria to minimise the risks and the number of preventable deaths associated with the use of drugs obtained from unregulated drug markets”.

Victorian Health Department secretary Euan Wallace acknowledged such a service “can provide information in support of reducing drug related harms”, but declined to support the recommendation, according to The Age

“However, there are no current plans to implement a drug checking service of the kind you have recommended in your findings,” Wallace was quoted as saying. 

The ACT has established a permanent drug testing centre located in Canberra’s CBD, known as CanTEST. The service opened in mid-2022.

An evaluation of the service’s first six months of operation found more than half of the drugs tested were not what the user had expected. 

One in 10 samples were discarded on-site once the user found out what was actually in the drugs, the Australian National University said in its independent evaluation of the service. 

“CanTEST is helping to change people’s drug behaviours. Service data shows that some clients decide not to take the drugs after they receive information about them, or they use the harm reduction advice to reduce their risks if they do go on to take the substance,” evaluation lead author associate professor Anna Olsen said in a statement in July.

“For example, when the substance was not what the user expected, one in three clients reported they would not use the drug.”

Queensland, too, is on track to offer drug testing services. 

Last month, the state’s government invited providers to bid for a tender to operate two fixed drug-checking sites and a mobile service for music and sporting events, The Brisbane Times reported.

“We need to be clear — this is a harm minimisation measure, not a law-and-order campaign. We are doing this to try to protect all Queenslanders from the dangerous effects of illicit drugs,” Queensland Health Minister Shannon Fentiman said, adding the state had looked at the results from the ACT when evaluating the services. 

The NSW government has been criticised for delaying action on drug testing services until the planned drug summit. A 2019 coroner’s report into six drug-related deaths at festivals recommended pill testing services, and a special commission known as the Ice Inquiry, published in 2020, also recommended the services. 

Asked by Crikey if the recommendations from the inquiry weren’t enough to convince the NSW government of the need for testing services, Park said he’d await the outcome of the drug summit. 

“The drug summit will be a bit more of a whole-of-government perspective, it will look at drug legislation and reform across the board,” he said. 

“The summit will happen sometime next year — we haven’t locked in a date yet, but it’ll look at an arrangement for these issues.” 

Sam Kidd, campaigns director at the drug safety charity Unharm, said state governments should move quickly to allow pill testing services in order to save lives.

“There is no reason we have to wait until we have another summit — delaying is not going to do anything to keep people safe and prevent further tragedies this summer,” Kidd told Crikey. 

“I think governments around the country are kind of looking at this issue through a very political lens, and they don’t necessarily see it as something that’s going to win them votes – they are, in a way, playing political games with people’s lives by not implementing what is a proven and effective health response to help people stay safe when they’re taking drugs.” 

Kidd said there are numerous countries around the world, including New Zealand, where testing was legal. He said he didn’t think it would be realistic to expect people to simply stop taking drugs — rather, officials should ensure those who do use drugs can do so safely. 

“The nature of drugs being illegal means that people are buying them from sources that themselves might not even know what’s really in them,” he said. 

“I think the idea that we can just have cops and sniffer dogs and tell people not to take drugs is just ridiculous, it’s out of touch with reality.”

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