Ideen er da god nok. Men hvordan har de tænkt sig, det skal fungere i praksis? Hvis de virkelig skal gå gennem alle de tests, som medicin gennemgår, er der aldrig noget af det der blir godkendt. At få et drug godkendt til klinisk brug kan snildt koste over 1 milliard kr. Og det tror jeg alligevel aldrig, at nogen rc shop på nettet kan eller vil diske op med. Der er vist nemmere måder at tjene sine penge for små firmaer.
I praksis tror jeg, at loven kommer til at betyde et totalforbud.
Citat:
Meaning of psychoactive substance
In this Act, unless the context otherwise requires, psychoactive substance—
(a) means a substance, mixture, preparation, article, device, or thing that is capable of inducing a psychoactive effect (by any means) in an individual who uses the psychoactive substance; and
(b) includes—
(i) an approved product:
(ii) a substance, mixture, preparation, article, device, or thing that is, or that is of a kind or belonging to a class that is, declared by the Governor-General by Order in Council made under section 81 to be a psychoactive substance for the purposes of this Act; but
(c) does not include—
(i) a controlled drug specified or described in Schedule 1, 2, or 3 of the Misuse of Drugs Act 1975:
(ii) a precursor substance specified or described in Schedule 4 of the Misuse of Drugs Act 1975:
(iii) a medicine as defined in section 3 of the Medicines Act 1981 or a related product as defined in section 94 of that Act:
(iv) a herbal remedy (as defined in section 2(1) of the Medicines Act 1981):
(v) a dietary supplement (as defined in regulation 2A of the Dietary Supplements Regulations 1985):
(vi) any food (as defined in section 2 of the Food Act 1981):
(vii) any alcohol (as defined in section 5(1) of the Sale and Supply of Alcohol Act 2012) unless the alcohol contains a psychoactive substance within the meaning of paragraph (a) or (b) that is not alcohol:
(viii) any tobacco product (as defined in section 2(1) of the Smoke-free Environments Act 1990) unless the tobacco product contains a psychoactive substance within the meaning of paragraph (a) or (b) that is not tobacco:
(ix) a substance, mixture, preparation, article, device, or thing that is, or that is of a kind or belonging to a class that is, declared by the Governor-General by Order in Council made under section 81 not to be a psychoactive substance for the purposes of this Act.
Citat:
Psychoactive Substances Expert Advisory Committee
(1) This section establishes the Psychoactive Substances Expert Advisory Committee.
(2) The functions of the advisory committee are—
(a) to evaluate, with regard to the results of preclinical and clinical trials, psychoactive products to assess whether they should be approved for use by individuals; and
(b) to advise the Authority about whether a psychoactive product should or should not be approved for use by individuals; and
(c) to increase public awareness of the advisory committee's work in relation to psychoactive substances, for example, by the timely release of papers, reports, and recommendations.
(3) The advisory committee may comprise up to 6 members who between them must have appropriate expertise in—
(a) pharmacology:
(b) toxicology:
(c) neurosciences:
(d) medicine:
(e) any other areas the Authority considers relevant.
(4) The Authority may appoint members of the advisory committee on any terms and conditions that the Authority thinks fit.
(5) The Authority must appoint 1 member as chairperson of the advisory committee.
(6) The Authority must consult the Minister before making an appointment to the advisory committee.
(7) The Authority may give terms of reference—
(a) on the advice that the advisory committee provides to the Authority:
(b) on the use of external experts to assist the advisory committee.
(8) The advisory committee may, subject to any provision of this Act or regulations, determine its own procedure.
http://www.legislation.govt.nz/bill/gov ... DLM5043057Citat:
The approval process for each product is expected to take between one and two years. It will cost companies $180,000 just to apply and an estimated $1 million to $2 million for the tests. Current products can stay on the shelves only if they apply to be tested within the first month.
http://www.nzherald.co.nz/nz/news/artic ... d=10885984Alkohol og andre stoffer vi kender i forvejen er udelukket af loven. Den regulerer ikke dem på nogen måde.
Godkendelse til 2 millioner NZD / Knap 9 millioner danske kroner.
Produkter allerede på markedet, kan blive der, selv før de bliver godkendt, så længe de ansøger om godkendelse.
Citat:
Fed up with the industry's trickery, Dunne has changed tactics with a world-first law change that will force drug manufacturers to prove their products are low-risk before they can go on sale. His Psychoactive Substances Bill, expected to become law by August 1 or earlier, will require drugmakers to pay for a series of clinical trials, including tests on human subjects. The approval process for each product is expected to take between one and two years. It will cost companies $180,000 just to apply and an estimated $1 million to $2 million for the tests. Current products can stay on the shelves only if they apply to be tested within the first month.
Dunne describes the law change as a knockout blow to an industry that has proved time and time again that it cannot be trusted. At the very least it should wipe out the corner dairy drug trade, putting an end to politically embarrassing news stories as the Government heads into election year.
Citat:
Documents obtained by the Herald last year under the Official Information Act show Dr Stewart Jessamine, head of the Government's medicine safety regulator, Medsafe, worried that the requirements could be portrayed as a de facto ban - a phrase echoed by Norml (National Organisation for the Reform of Marijuana Laws) campaigner Chris Fowlie in his submission to the select committee. Online drug-seller MindFuel predicted the trade would die off, as no manufacturer would be prepared to spend $2 million and wait up to two years to win approval for a product so mild that few people would buy it.
Citat:
Hall says drugmakers are willing to accept the setback if the high standard is based on scientific evidence, not political prejudice. But he says if the bar is set too high, possibly by politicial interference, the bill will fail because drug users will turn back to the gangs and the black market.
Dunne agrees that the number of approved substances is likely to be low and successful products could be on the mild side, precisely because they must be low-risk. He acknowledges that might drive some users to buy illicit drugs for a bigger high.
"That's always possible, but what do you do? If you go for a complete prohibition - even if that were possible to achieve given the nature of the substances - that's exactly what you drive up. If you simply let the status quo prevail, you've got a totally intolerable situation. If you say we'll just ban dangerous substances, then we're forever chasing our tail. So we need a circuit-breaker and I see this legislation very much as that."