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Pill testing will be introduced at Schoolies on the Gold Coast after national data revealed young women are taking drugs at the same rate as men. or signup to continue reading Queensland is one of only three jurisdictions in the nation to have legalised pill testing and its state Labor government hopes to help school leavers celebrate safely. Health Minister Shannon Fentiman said confidential and free pill testing would feature at the end-of-year event at a cost of $80,000.

"There is no safe way to take illicit drugs," she told budget estimates on Thursday. "But if people are intent on taking these substances, and we have the technology available to help them know what's in it, then why wouldn't we offer that to people?" The Schoolies service was offered after showed women aged 18 to 24 were taking illicit drugs at the same rate as young men for the first time since records began. "We want everyone attending Schoolies to be safe and enjoy the celebrations with their friends," Ms Fentiman said.



"Without these services, we're missing the opportunity to connect young people with healthcare professionals." The National Drug Strategy Household Survey also showed more than one third of young women had taken an illicit drug in the last 12 months - a 27 per cent increase over five years. Queensland's first pill testing service was rolled out at the Rabbits Eat Lettuce festival over the Easter weekend where 250 people had substances assessed.

Calls for standardised pill testing programs at festivals increased after the deaths of Dassarn Tarbutt, 24 and Ebony Greening, 22, at the 2019 edition of the festival. Queensland, ACT and Victoria are the only Australian jurisdictions to have legalised pill testing. Queensland committed $1 million over two years to fund pill testing, with fixed sites established in Brisbane and the Gold Coast.

More than half of the people who took their drugs to the Brisbane clinic chose to discard them on site. But the state opposition said it would ditch the scheme if it won the October election. "The LNP does not support the soft on drug approach by the Labor Party in Queensland," deputy leader Jarrod Bleijie said.

The state government also unveiled $1.73 billion for cancer care services as part of a 10-year strategy. Data at budget estimates revealed ambulance ramping had improved with less than half of patients left on stretchers at hospitals for more than 30 minutes.

It marked an improvement on the previous quarter but Ms Fentiman said more had to be done, noting more than 1000 long-stay patients per night were clogging up beds as they couldn't be relocated to aged care or disability facilities. Advertisement Sign up for our newsletter to stay up to date. We care about the protection of your data.

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