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Thursday, November 18, 2010

Cocaine-Levamisole Test Kit Results, First Drop

Posted by on Thu, Nov 18, 2010 at 1:12 PM

Last weekend, folks handed out the levamisole test kit at three places around Seattle: the University District Needle Exchange, at a table in Pioneer Square, and on a sidewalk on Capitol Hill. We're just starting to get postcard-surveys back—14 so far—and the results, while extremely preliminary, are a little grim*.

Only 2 of the 14 samples tested negative for levamisole and one of those samples had been hanging around somebody's house since 2009.

So that's an 85% contamination rate (a 92% contamination rate for all samples from 2010), which is higher than the DEA's estimated 70% contamination rate for the entire U.S.

Of the two levamisole-negative samples, one was purchased in the Central District and one was purchased on Capitol Hill.

Thirteen of the samples were powder cocaine and the one crack-cocaine sample, purchased in the Green Lake neighborhood, tested positive. (The respondent on that survey wrote: "2—3 years same source! Not cool!")

The neighborhood breakdown for tested samples: 6 from Capitol Hill, 3 from the Central District, 2 from Ravenna, 1 from Green Lake, 1 from the University District, and 1 unknown. The date range of purchase, excluding the 2009 sample, was from mid-September to mid-November, 2010.

I'll post more results as they come (the postcard surveys from last weekend are just starting to trickle in in the mail) and hopefully we'll eventually post a map and a grid with complete results.

It appears that the CDC has stopped its surveillance of levamisole-induced immune-system crashes so we have no idea how many people are getting sick, or even dying, from this stuff. All we have at the moment is anecdotal evidence—but doctors at UW and Harborview say they're continuing to see patients with levamisole poisoning in Seattle and some doctors report seeing patients with levamisole poisoning every week.

If you have questions about the project, test results you'd like to share via email, or questions about how to get a kit (we're almost out at the moment, but we'll make more), write to cocaine@thestranger.com.

And soon we'll publish the kit protocol online, so all you Sloggers with access to lab equipment can make your own...

* If you have no idea what the hell I'm talking about, the answer starts here.

 

Comments (14) RSS

Oldest First Unregistered On Registered On Add a comment
Hernandez 1
Holy shit! Take care of yourselves, folks. Maybe find something else to party with for a while. We all know it's fun, but it's not worth ending up in the hospital or ending up dead!
Posted by Hernandez http://hernandezlist.blogspot.com on November 18, 2010 at 1:30 PM
veo_ 2
if only ketamine weren't so expensive up here...
Posted by veo_ on November 18, 2010 at 1:44 PM
skweetis 3
Really? You can buy crack in Greenlake? Weird.
Posted by skweetis on November 18, 2010 at 1:46 PM
evilvolus 4
Damn. There goes my plan to replace FourLoko's role in my life with Burbon'n'Coke.

...don't look at me like that.
Posted by evilvolus on November 18, 2010 at 1:47 PM
5
12 out of 14 Cocaine samples spiked w/ a toxic chemical, hmmm maybe Nancy Reagan was on to something w/ the whole "Just Say No" thing.
Posted by Ken Mehlman on November 18, 2010 at 1:56 PM
Fifty-Two-Eighty 6
Makes me really, really happy that the last time I did coke was 1985.
Posted by Fifty-Two-Eighty http://www.nra.org on November 18, 2010 at 1:57 PM
Julie in Eugene 7
I know this is not what is actually happening, but if someone were trying to get people to stop doing a certain drug, this would be a very effective strategy.

It's like a few years ago, when I was watching a special on bush meat and some activists who were trying to stop the practice of eating certain endangered animals. My comment was that they could save a heck of a lot of time/money by finding the source/supply/distributors, and contaminating the meat so that it made people sick. People would learn pretty quickly that bush meat = illness (completely unethical and illegal to do this, of course, but it would certainly be effective).
Posted by Julie in Eugene on November 18, 2010 at 2:13 PM
Amnt 8
@7 - Isn't bush meat wild be definition? There is no central source to contaminate, which is why stopping it is so difficult...
Posted by Amnt on November 18, 2010 at 2:25 PM
evilvolus 9
@7 - Except that those doctors who report levamisole poisoning on a weekly basis are also seeing "frequent flyers."

"It could kill you" has rarely been a powerful stopping force in the war on drugs.
Posted by evilvolus on November 18, 2010 at 2:26 PM
Julie in Eugene 10
@8 Yes, but, in this special I was watching, they talked about how the meat was brought to market. They specifically showed a distributor with a truck piled high with dead animals destined for a local market... that image is what prompted me to make the comment -- all of those animals in one place. I don't know how one would actually go about contaminating the meat (presumably, a truck full of bush meat is worth a bunch of money so they guard it heavily), it was just an idle thought about how that would be more effective than any educational campaigns or anti-poaching efforts.

In the same way, levamisole may do what years of Just Say No and the war on drugs couldn't (at least temporarily)...
Posted by Julie in Eugene on November 18, 2010 at 2:32 PM
Julie in Eugene 11
@9 Maybe for some drugs "it could kill you" isn't effective. But, powder cocaine is a little different... especially when we're talking about a 92% contamination rate, I think that may deter a large number of recreational users. Just my opinion...
Posted by Julie in Eugene on November 18, 2010 at 2:39 PM
gloomy gus 12
@3, never been to Beth's, then?
Posted by gloomy gus on November 18, 2010 at 3:16 PM
Dr Radium 13
There could be some selection bias elevating these results- people being more likely to send on results if they are positive. But it would have to be a hell of a bias, far larger than is likely, for these results to mean anything other than heavy levamisole contamination of Seattle's cocaine supply.

But at least with the the kit, people will KNOW that they have been exposed to levamisole. Otherwise, most people will assume their coke is levamisole free.

And if they know, they can watch for symptoms. If you catch it early, levamisole toxicity is easy to treat. But delay treatment, and people end up in the ICU or worse.
Posted by Dr Radium on November 19, 2010 at 11:52 AM
14
Are the test kits still being distributed?
Posted by Aurora on November 25, 2010 at 11:45 AM

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