| Literature DB >> 27094257 |
Evelyn Hearne1, Jean-Paul Cornelius Grund2,3,4, Marie Claire Van Hout5, Jim McVeigh6.
Abstract
Several home-produced substances such as krokodil and boltushka are prevalent in many Eastern European countries. Anecdotal reports of its use have been circulating in Germany and Norway; however, this has not been confirmed. Its use has also been reported by the media in the USA, although only one confirmed report of its use exists. Home-produced drugs are associated with high levels of morbidity and a number of complex health issues such as the spread of blood borne viruses, gangrene, and internal organ damage. The high incidence of HIV rates amongst people who inject home-produced substances is a public health concern. The resulting physical health consequences of injecting these crude substances are very severe in comparison to heroin or amphetamine acquired in black markets. Due to this fact and the increased mortality associated with these substances, professionals in the area of prevention, treatment, and policy development need to be cognisant of the presentation, harms, and the dangers associated with home-produced substances globally. This scoping review aimed to examine existing literature on the subject of home-produced heroin and amphetamine-type stimulant substitutes. The review discussed the many implications such research may have in the areas of policy and practice. Data were gathered through the use of qualitative secondary resources such as journal articles, reports, reviews, case studies, and media reports. The home production of these substances relies on the utilisation of precursor drugs such as less potent stimulants, tranquillizers, analgesics, and sedatives or natural plant ingredients. The Internet underpins the facilitation of this practice as recipes, and diverted pharmaceutical sales are available widely online, and currently, ease of access to the Internet is evident worldwide. This review highlights the necessity of prevention, education, and also harm reduction related to home-produced drugs and also recommends consistent monitoring of online drug fora, online drug marketplaces, and unregulated pharmacies.Entities:
Keywords: Homemade drugs; Internet; Kitchen chemistry; Krokodil; Scoping studies
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27094257 PMCID: PMC4837500 DOI: 10.1186/s12954-016-0105-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Harm Reduct J ISSN: 1477-7517
Fig. 1Flow diagram charting inclusion and exclusion criteria for this study
Categories used to organise the literature
| Homemade drug use in Eastern Europe | |
| Homemade drug use outside of Eastern Europe | |
| Heroin and amphetamine-type stimulants/substitutes | |
| Harms associated with homemade drugs | |
| Drug and formulation tampering | |
| The Internet | |
| Scoping studies |
Fig. 2Summary map
Homemade drug solutions, street names, ingredients, geographic area of use and key public health concerns
| Street name | Drug type/chemical | Ingredients | Key adverse health and social consequences | Country/city of use |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Krokodil. | Opiate-desomorphine | Codeine, gasoline or paint thinner, iodine, red phosphorous, tropicamide | Injecting risks for BBV transmission and risks present in the production process, contamination, chemical reaction, sharing of paraphernalia, and group injecting practices. | Russia, Ukraine, Georgia, Kazakhstan. Germany (Bochum, Berlin, Frankfurt), Norway (Tromsø). Also: Anecdotal reports in UK, Czech Republic, France, Belgium |
| Boltushka. | Cathinone | Ephedrine, pseudoephedrine, warm water, household vinegar, and potassium permanganate | Injecting risks for BBV transmission and risks present in the production process, contamination, chemical reaction, sharing of paraphernalia, and group injecting practices. | Odessa* |
| Jeff | Methcathinone | Phenylpropanolamine, warm water, household vinegar, and potassium permanganate | Injecting risks for BBV transmission and risks present in the production process, contamination, chemical reaction, sharing of paraphernalia, and group injecting practices. | Ukraine |
| Fentanyl patches (new and used). | Opiate | Fentanyl, acetaminophen, caffeine | Fentanyl use is associated with increased odds of overdose. | Russia, Belarus |
| Cheornaya | Opiate | Poppy Straw, cigarette ash, sodium bicarbonate | Access to poppy straw is seasonal and when it is scarce, injectors will turn to other opiate-type drugs. | Russia |
| Himiya | Opiate | Poppy straw | Access to poppy straw is seasonal and when it is scarce, injectors will turn to other opiate-type drugs, including krokodil. | Ukraine |
| Braun | Opiate | Mixture of morphine and codeine products, e.g. hydrocodone | Injecting risks for BBV transmission and risks present in the production process, contamination, sharing of paraphernalia, and group injecting practices. | Czech Republic |
| Kompot | Opiate | Poppy straw, acetic anhydride, acetone | Access to poppy straw is seasonal and when it is scarce, injectors will turn to other opiate-type drugs. | Poland |
| Shirka (Ukraine) | Opiate | Poppy straw | Access to poppy straw is seasonal and when it is scarce, injectors will turn to other opiate-type drugs | Ukraine, Moldova |
| Shirka (Odessa*) | Methamphetamine | Ephedrin, Pseudoephedrine | Binge-using patterns that enhance the probability of unintentional overdoses. | Odessa* |
| Hemia | Opiate | Poppy straw | Access to poppy straw is seasonal and when it is scarce, injectors will turn to other opiate-type drugs, including krokodil and kolyosa. | Odessa* |
| Kolyosa | Opiate | Mixture of codeine-containing pills | Users will turn to this due to poppy straw being unavailable with associated overdose and injecting risks. | Moldova |
| Pervitin | Methamphetamine | Ephedrine, pseudoephedrine, industrial chemicals such as gasoline, toluene and tetrachlorethylene | Binge-using patterns that enhance the probability of unintentional overdoses. | Czech Republic, Moldova |
* Ukraine - refers to all cities in Ukraine, except Odessa, which has a range of different terms/names for their homemade drugs