英国学校通过电子烟吸食合成大麻素的情况

G. Cozier, ‡. M. Gardner, ‡. S. Craft, Martine Skumlien, Jack Spicer, Rachael An-drews, Alexander Power, Tom S F Haines, Richard Bowman, Amy E. Manley, Peter Sunderland, Oliver B. Sutcliffe, Stephen M. Husbands, Lindsey Hines, Gillian Taylor, Tom P Freeman, Jennifer Scott, Christopher R. Pudney
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摘要

合成大麻素(SC),俗称香料或 K2,是英国监狱中最常见的毒品,近一半的非自然死亡与合成大麻素有关。在社区,SCs 与多种毒品使用者有关,他们也可能是无家可归者。使用 SC 的人报告说,他们会出现令人衰弱的副作用和戒断症状,同时还会产生依赖性。迄今为止,人们一直认为SC的使用主要局限于监狱和无家可归的人群。然而,英国的媒体报道越来越多地发现了儿童在学校昏倒的案例,据称这些案例与吸食和吸食一种药物有关,这种药物被报道为四氢大麻酚(THC)"合成大麻 "或 "香料"。因此,我们进行了首次研究,以确定从学校例行收集的电子烟中的 SCs 及其数量。我们从英格兰不同地区的 27 所学校取样,这些学校代表了广泛的社会指标(免费校餐、持续旷课和特殊教育需要)。取样材料由各个学校自行提交,这些材料是在学校正常运作期间查获的电子烟,并通过当地的警察部队移交给我们进行分析。我们发现,在所有被抽样的电子烟中,17.5%的电子烟被检测出SC,而在所有被抽样的27所学校中,21所(78%)的学校被检测出SC。此外,SC 电子烟的比例与社会贫困程度的指标--有资格享受免费校餐的学生比例--呈正相关。SC阳性电子烟几乎全部出现在电子烟液瓶和可填充电子烟装置中,只有极少数出现在一次性电子烟产品中。在阳性样品中,我们发现 SC 的平均浓度为 1.03 毫克/毫升,最高浓度为 3.6 毫克/毫升-1。与 SC 的高流行率形成鲜明对比的是,很少有样品含有四氢大麻酚(1.6%)。我们认为,小学生被当作 "大麻 "出售SC电子烟,他们可能并不知道自己在吸食(有时是供应)危害更大的毒品。我们的研究结果对英国的警务和医疗政策以及教育机构和学校都至关重要。
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Synthetic cannabinoids consumed via e-cigarettes in English schools
Synthetic cannabinoids (SCs), colloquially spice or K2, are the most common drug to be found in prisons in the UK, where they are associated with nearly half of non-natural deaths. In the community, SCs are associated with poly-drug users who are also likely to be homeless. People who use SCs report debilitating side effects and withdrawal symptoms, coupled with dependence. Until now, SC use was believed to be largely restricted to prison and homeless populations. However, media reporting in the UK has increasingly identified cases of children collapsing in schools, which are claimed to be as-sociated with vaping and putatively the vaping of a drug, variously reported as tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) 'synthetic cannabis' or 'spice'. We therefore conducted the first study to identify and quantity SCs in e-cigarettes routinely collected from schools. We sampled 27 schools from geographically distinct regions of England, representing a very broad range of social metrics (free school meals, persistent absenteeism, and SEN). The material was sampled by self-submission by individual schools of e-cigarettes seized during normal school operation and transferred to us for analysis via local po-lice forces. We found a remarkably consistent picture where SCs were detected in 17.5 % of all e-cigarettes sampled, and in 21 of 27 (78 %) of all sampled schools. Moreover, the percentage of SC e-cigarettes positively correlated with a metric of social deprivation, the fraction of pupils eligible for free school meals. The SC positive e-cigarettes were almost entire-ly found in e-cigarette liquid bottles and refillable e-cigarette devices, with very few identified in single use e-cigarette products. Within the positive samples we found an average SC concentration of 1.03 mg/mL with a maximum of 3.6 mg mL-1. In contrast to the high prevalence of SCs, few samples contained THC (1.6 %). We suggest that pupils are being sold SC e-cigarettes as 'cannabis' and may be unaware they are consuming (and sometimes supplying) considerably more harmful drugs. Our findings are immediately crucial to policy policing and healthcare in the UK as well as to educational bodies and schools.
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