NSW Health has issued a public drug warning following the detection of an increasing number of unregistered benzodiazepines in counterfeit alprazolam.
NSW Health warns taking non-prescribed alprazolam can cause serious harm or death.
The tablets have variable appearance and can look like a variety of local or overseas alprazolam 2mg brands, such as Kalma, Xanax, Mylan, Sandoz. Products not purchased at pharmacies are at high risk of being counterfeit.
Counterfeit alprazolam is often poorly manufactured, and the ingredients and amounts can vary substantially, even within the same batch.
Testing of counterfeit alprazolam has shown that most counterfeit tablets do not contain alprazolam, instead they contain unregistered, illicit benzodiazepines and other drugs, for example – stimulants, which can be more harmful.
Effects to look out for
Difficulty speaking or walking, drowsiness, loss of consciousness, slow breathing/snoring and skin turning blue. It is possible people who have overdosed will also display unexpected effects.
Support and advice
- Call Alcohol and Drug Information Service (ADIS) on 1800 250 015 at any time 24/7. Start a Web Chat with an ADIS counsellor Mon-Fri, 8.30am-5pm.
- Call NUAA on 1800 644 413 (Mon-Fri 9am-5pm) to speak to a peer or visit NUAA/DanceWize NSW for a fact sheet on fake benzos.
- Call the Poisons Information Centre on 13 11 26 for advice on adverse effects from drugs.
- Visit Your Room for information on benzos.
The public drug warning is available at: www.health.nsw.gov.au/aod/public-drug-alerts/Pages/default.aspx
Clinician safety information is available at: www.health.nsw.gov.au/aod/clinical-safety-alerts/Pages/default.aspx