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From clean to cringe: The story of the Nigerian drug epidemic, by Lawal Temitayo

A brief peep into our future, as a nation, could be not so rosy but what is particularly scary is an impending and perhaps inescapable, drug epidemic. What is scarier is how we seemingly, and rather disturbingly, play the ostrich at how huge this problem is or the devastating effects it promises. It is so prevalent to have become the norm that one who doesn’t do drugs, in any of its many and ingenious forms, has to, once in a while, check if he’s the one actually on the normality path.
Addictive and obscene behaviours that were hitherto considered motor park louts and socially deviants’ second nature are now common and even glamourised in our universities; citadels of learning and centres of civilisation. There are drug powered orgies everywhere. To them, codeine is water and shisha is the new cool. The quest to get ‘high’ from illicit drugs has even gone insane that they give no fig about the healthiness of what they take in as long as it gives the desired result. Can you imagine human beings now sniff lizards’ dung? Some have become foragers whose job is to look for and fetch Spirogyra which they dry and sniff.
I was told of some female students at a popular religion-based private university who left school to have a ‘good time’ and, after the timeout at the club, followed home some guys who were held spellbound by what they saw. The ladies took the hard drugs provided, weren’t satisfied and sought to be taken to a covered gutter! Having seen their host disgusted by their queer request, they got perfumes, sprayed them all at once into thick towels, buried themselves and boom! These, really, are the mothers of the next generation.
These students are supposedly the leaders of tomorrow. What saddens the heart the more is that these disturbing trends have somehow inexplicably crept into the secondary schools. And this time, it’s not only the young students that are caught in this unfortunate web, the teachers who should be inspiring icons shamelessly compete with them. Well, that too is somewhat inspiring. Talk about salt, a natural preservative, itself being spoilt.
Like many other social vices, unemployment and poverty have been fingered to be major causes of this. I’m afraid this is no more than a rehashed defence to excuse responsibility. Unemployment isn’t uselessness. Not all poor people do drugs. It’s, in fact, a travesty of it. Talking penury, how much does a mixed bottle of codeine cost? Thousands. And some take 5 to 8 bottles daily, spending roughly 10 thousand naira. If that’s poverty, I’m afraid the real people below the benchmark would love to be in that category.
Esteem issues, largely borne out of the empty and bandwagon standards we set particularly on social media, also have a hand in this. Slim is cool and not-slim is trash. Resultedly, some female folks get entangled in the net of esteem deficiency which leads them to unhealthy practices. Apart from anorexia nervosa, a distressful medical condition, they are also at risk of hardened addiction by binging on hard drugs like cocaine. The quest for a flat tummy has really gone bonkers that many see the healthy path as too long and stressful and therefore opt for the short drug-powered adventure. It doesn’t end well.
The absence of independent-mindedness and the dependence on some external loci of control have always made us look for motivation or, sometimes, instructions in others who aren’t necessarily better than us. Aristotle was a mentor to many philosophers. Abraham Lincoln inspired many great leaders. His ideas are even still ideals in some quarters. Nelson Mandela was the hope and the model of steadfastness to many Pan-Africanists. The litany is long. Who are the models of this century? Our thieving politicians? It’s a no brainer that contemporary youngsters will rather choose the fugitive and drug head but affluent stars. Model shopping is nobody’s job by the way but it’s known that our favourite songs’ lyrics, music videos and the like are full of cuss words, objectification of women and glorification of hard drugs. It takes a five-star miracle for the younglings not to pick on these things.
This is no moral argument. It can’t be. This is not a generation that lives on or cares about morality. Besides, morals are largely cultural, relative and subjective. So, not that- it will be a futile exercise. This is neither an advocacy for complete eradication of drug abuse. You know what they say about wishes, beggars, and horses? It will be a tall order! The crux is we need to actuate pragmatic and enduring solutions before it becomes too late.
To expedite action, government, especially at the centre needs to step up its game on blocking illicit drugs’ major routes of entry into the country. This is a national emergency. All apparatuses of national security especially in the health sector should be activated to ensure those already trapped in the country are flushed out. The indifference due to the notion that the country is only a ‘conduit pipe’ for this drugs is wrong- it is now a priced destination.
Furthermore, for any progress to be made really, there should be a continuous and aggressive nationwide campaign against and sensitisation on the potential destruction of drugs. This will serve two purposes concurrently. The first is to break the intergenerational transfer of this dreadful menace and the second is to win over and rehabilitate those who are already involved. Focused counselling is highly needed in our schools, especially at the secondary level. Alumni associations and Parents and Teachers Associations should look in this direction.
This is treating it as a medical emergency. Rehabilitation centres should flourish to accommodate people who seek help. In addition to actually doing its work of teaching morals and proper living, religious bodies or institutions could help in this regard. These are the kinds of projects they should champion. That, of course, will be complementary to the efforts of NGOs and the government. Government, in particular, should make investment in its human resources a priority. Of what use are capital infrastructures if the people to use them are mentally damaged?

Lawal Temitayo, a psychologist and writer, tweets @Lawatem

Source: The Cable

The Codeine Epidemic and why you should be concerned, by Yinka Ogunnubi

I don’t know how many people saw the headline in the Vanguard about 3 million bottles of Codeine consumed daily in the north.
That’s according to the Senate who thereafter mandated its committee on drugs and narcotics to investigate the issue. Now a part of me wants to believe that figure is an exaggeration. That it can’t simply be true. That the math does not add up. Because if 3 million bottles are consumed in a day, then it means about 90 million are consumed in a month and about 1.1 billion are consumed in a year just in the north alone. Let me put it another way. A bottle of cough syrup is 100ml. Meaning that 300,000 litres of codeine is consumed daily, 9 million monthly and 108 million litres consumed yearly. Put in another way, that is the equivalent of 216 million bottles of Star lager consumed in a year (assuming each bottle is 50cl). And this is only in the north.
So right off the bat, I had issues with believing the story and I basically shelved it aside. That was until I discovered the scene as shown in the picture I took at the Ikeja Mall (popularly called ShopRite). The ground where I parked was littered with used codeine bottles with straws used from the previous night. On further enquiry, I was told it was a normal occurrence at night at the same location.
What I saw, got me concerned enough to ask questions. I called friends who worked in the industry to try to understand the problem and the issues surrounding. While I am not an expert on this issue and I don’t claim to know much, I do feel like an interested party mainly because I am a parent and I have a responsibility to protect my children as well as other young people. So my aim is to present my findings in order to enrich the conversation among those who like me know little about this subject but are looking to find a solution.
On the surface, it appears that pharmacies are the main beneficiaries of this epidemic. Not with the rising turnover from sales of Codeine related drugs. I understand that the price of Codeine drugs have gone up due to increased demand. There is obviously a commercial explanation for this drug epidemic. But if you thought that this problem can be solved at the level of the pharmacy, then it shows how little you know of the challenges involved. The pharmacies (though key stakeholders) are at the far end of the value chain to make any significant impact. For there to be any impact, we must start from the very top of the supply chain and attack this problem from every end of the value chain.
First, it is important to note that virtually all the cough suppressants and expectorants containing Codeine are manufactured in Nigeria. However, the Codeine which is a vital element in the production is imported as raw materials by these drug companies. While Codeine is considered as one of the “Safest Opioid analgesics”, it is, however, a regulated drug. It is regulated at the international level and at the local level. At the international level, it is regulated by the International Narcotics Control Board (INCB) an independent and quasi-judicial monitoring body for the implementation of the United Nations international drug control conventions on narcotics and controlled substance (1961), The United Nations Convention on Psychotropic Substances (1971), The United Nations Convention against Illicit Traffic in Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances (1988). This board among other things in collaboration with government agencies determines the levels of controlled drugs which can be imported in a country at any given point in time. For there to be an increase in volume, there has to be scientific and statistical proof that more controlled substance is needed. In Nigeria, the Narcotics and Controlled Substances (NCS) Directorate of NAFDAC is charged with the responsibility of ensuring that Nigeria fulfils its obligations under the relevant international conventions which Nigeria is a signatory to. They do this by granting import authorizations for the importation of narcotics (in raw material or finished goods) for medical and scientific use. In addition to that, they also have the responsibility of monitoring and inspecting importers, marketers and end users facilities to ensure proper handling, storage and utilization of controlled drugs and substances to prevent diversion and illegitimate use. In other words, they have the responsibility to approve the importation of Codeine as raw materials and also monitor its distribution and use in Nigeria.
What has become clear is that the volume of Codeine imported into this country has increased exponentially in recent years. What we do not know and need to find out is if these increases are from legal importation or from smuggling activities. As far back as 2012, NAFDAC stated that it had reduced the volume of codeine importation from 3,400 kilograms to 1,200kg (a 65% drop). Is this still the case? Can we get the importation data of Codeine imported into Nigeria from 2011 to date? This will help us plot a trend analysis to see if the figures have been truly increasing or decreasing and to seek justifications either way. Can we have the figure of how many importers have been licensed by NAFDAC to import these controlled substances from 2011 to 2017? Have they increased or decreased? Assuming there was an increase in importation, what scientific data did we submit to the INCB to justify such as increase? In what way is NAFDAC monitoring the distribution and use of Codeine related drugs? Has it noticed a pattern among certain distributors indicating a diversion for commercial purposes? #AskQuestions
In my opinion, these and more are the questions we need to ask because therein lies the problem and also the solution to this epidemic that is tugging at the hearts of our young people. To understand the enormity of this problem, you need to talk to young people, schools and even event planners. One event planner told us that for ethical reasons, she had to turn down some jobs to plan party events for young people because their parents approved Codeine to be part of the cocktail. If this is true, then it means that the problem is bigger than we thought. It also means that if you have a teenager or even a young child, you need to be careful the parties that you approve for them to go because the drinks they take may be spiked to give them a high. The scariest part of this drug epidemic is about how this issue is becoming mainstream and normal. A pharmacist told me that previously when they come to buy Codeine, they would typically feign illness and ask for one bottle. She says but now, they just walk in confidently and say ‘I want to buy Codeine’ and they can repeat that round like 2 – 3 times a day buying two bottles per time. She says, even if she refuses to sell to them for ethical and regulatory reasons, they only need to go to the pharmacy next door to get the product.
So as you can see, this issue is multifaceted. It is first about REGULATION in terms of control of volumes of Codeine and other controlled substance imported into the country. It is also about ENFORCEMENT in terms of controlling the volumes that might be smuggled in and also ensuring that those caught in the act are punished and prosecuted. It is also about MONITORING of the importers to check how the drug is distributed, to whom it is distributed and how end users are administering it. Finally, it is also about DE-COMMERCIALISATION of the substance. While I am not sure if Codeine drugs are still on the OTC list, pharmaceutical outlets have a responsibility to ensure that anyone who comes into the store to buy Codeine drugs should come with a prescription. If not, then the patient should be sighted even if he/she is a child. And even if that is not possible, volumes sold to a person per time should be restricted to not more than a number per week. Last I checked, a 100ml Codeine bottle should last 5 days. So there is no reason why someone should buy one bottle today and return the next day to buy another bottle. That person is clearly using it as a beverage for recreational purposes and abusing the drug. If all pharmacies abide by this norm especially with the knowledge that they can lose their license if caught in violation of existing regulations, then we will have a good chance of controlling this epidemic. If a buyer knows that he/she will get the same response from one pharmacies as well as the next, the opportunity for easy abuse as is the case now will be reduced if not eliminated.
This matter concerns everyone whether you are a parent, a pharmacist or a government official. What makes this Codeine epidemic more dangerous is the relative ease of obtaining the drug and the danger inherent in mainstreaming the subject as just another recreational past time. If you are a human being, you should be concerned. I will end with a story of what I experienced at one pharmacy. I went in to purchase a drug, and there was this woman that came in and asked one of the sales girls to get her a particular drug. The next thing I observed was that the in-house pharmacist came out and beckoned on the woman to come. He followed up by asking her a few questions, ‘Do you have a doctor’s prescription? What do you want to use this drug for? Are you aware of the side-effects of this drug?’ At some point, the lady got uncomfortable with the questioning and stormed out of the pharmacy. Even though I didn’t know the exact drug she came to buy, it was obvious to me that she was abusing a prescription drug and that the Pharmacist knew as well. If only there are many pharmacists like this guy who would put profit aside and care genuinely for people who are hurting themselves and their families, maybe we might have the chance to stop this epidemic before it overwhelms us.