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Legal party pill use in New Zealand: 
 
Prevalence of use, availability, health harms and  
‘gateway effects’ of benzylpiperazine (BZP)  
and triflourophenylmethylpiperazine  
(TFMPP) 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
C. Wilkins 
M. Girling 
P. Sweetsur 
T. Huckle 
J. Huakau 
 
 
 
 
 
Centre for Social and Health Outcomes Research and Evaluation (SHORE) 
Massey University 
Auckland 
New Zealand 
 
 
 

Acknowledgements 
 
The funding for this research was awarded from the National Drug Policy 
Discretionary Grant Fund which is jointly managed by the Inter-Agency Committee 
on Drugs (IACD) and the Ministerial Committee on Drug Policy (MCDP). The study 
was lead by Dr. Chris Wilkins who developed the research proposal and 
questionnaire, planned the analysis and wrote the final report. Melissa Girling 
managed the survey data collection. The statistical analysis was completed by Paul 
Sweetsur. Taisia Huckle and John Huakau assisted with sampling issues and managed 
the survey telephone numbers. The quality of the data collected is a tribute to the 
dedication of the team of CATI interviewers and supervisors. Last, but by no means 
least, we acknowledge the time and willingness of the general public to respond to the 
survey, without which the research could not have taken place. 
 
 
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Contents 
Acknowledgements ......................................................................................................2 
Contents.......................................................................................................................3 
Summary......................................................................................................................5 
Introduction ............................................................................................................10 
Background ............................................................................................................10 
Aims .......................................................................................................................12 
Method ...................................................................................................................12 
Analysis..................................................................................................................13 
CHAPTER 1 – PREVALENCE AND PATTERNS OF LEGAL PARTY PILL USE......14 
Introduction.........................................................................................................14 
Ever tried legal party pills ...................................................................................14 
Age of first use of legal party pills.......................................................................15 
Reasons for never using legal party pills............................................................16 
Last year use of legal party pills .........................................................................17 
Use of legal party pills in the last 30 days ..........................................................18 
Changes in legal party pill use ...........................................................................18 
Reasons for using less legal party pills ..............................................................19 
Reasons for having stopped using legal party pills ............................................19 
Reasons for using more legal party pills ............................................................20 
Frequency of legal party pill use.........................................................................21 
Means of administration .....................................................................................21 
Number of legal party pills taken ........................................................................21 
Binged on legal party pills ..................................................................................22 
Location of use ...................................................................................................23 
Legal party pill use and driving...........................................................................23 
CHAPTER 2 - POLY DRUG USE AND LEGAL PARTY PILLS .................................25 
Introduction.........................................................................................................25 
Legal party pills and level of drinking .................................................................25 
Substances used in combination with legal party pills .......................................26 
Substances used to recover from legal party pills..............................................26 
Other drug use by legal party pill users..............................................................27 
CHAPTER 3 – HARMS FROM LEGAL PARTY PILLS ..............................................29 
Introduction.........................................................................................................29 
Self-reported harms from legal party pills...........................................................29 
Physical problems from legal party pill use ........................................................30 
Psychological problems from legal party pill use................................................31 
Accessing health services ..................................................................................32 
CHAPTER 4 - AVAILABILITY, POTENCY AND PRICE OF LEGAL PARTY PILLS ..33 
Introduction.........................................................................................................33 
Availability of legal party pills..............................................................................33 
Strength of legal party pills .................................................................................34 
Prices and purchase of legal party pills..............................................................35 
CHAPTER 5 – EXTENT OF DEPENDENCY ON LEGAL PARTY PILLS ..................37 
Introduction.........................................................................................................37 
Extent of dependency.........................................................................................37 
Extent that use is out of control ..........................................................................38 
Concern about missing a dose...........................................................................38 
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Worry about legal party pill use ..........................................................................39 
Wish you could stop ...........................................................................................40 
Difficulty stopping ...............................................................................................40 
Extent required help to reduce level of use ........................................................41 
CHAPTER 6 – ‘GATEWAY’ EFFECTS AND LEGAL PARTY PILLS .........................42 
Introduction.........................................................................................................42 
Current relationship between legal party pills and illicit drug use.......................42 
Past relationship between legal party pills and illicit drug use............................43 
CHAPTER 7 – USER PERCEPTIONS OF LEGAL PARTY PILLS ............................45 
Introduction.........................................................................................................45 
Characteristics of legal party pills most liked......................................................45 
Characteristics of legal party pills most disliked .................................................46 
Knowledge of the safe number of legal party pills to take ..................................46 
Knowledge of what substances should not be taken with legal party pills .........47 
Types of people who should not use legal party pills .........................................48 
Perceptions of the health risk of using different drug types................................48 
CHAPTER 8 – POLICY AND LEGAL PARTY PILLS .................................................50 
Introduction.........................................................................................................50 
Age identification ................................................................................................50 
Refused purchase ..............................................................................................51 
Perceptions of the current regulation of legal party pills.....................................52 
Areas of regulation of legal party pills like to see strengthened .........................52 
Areas of regulation of legal party pills like to see relaxed ..................................53 
CHAPTER 9 – DEMOGRAPHIC CHARACTERISTICS OF LEGAL PARTY PILL 
USERS.......................................................................................................................55 
Introduction.........................................................................................................55 
Age and gender..................................................................................................55 
Ethnicity..............................................................................................................56 
Employment status.............................................................................................56 
Income................................................................................................................57 
Geographical location.........................................................................................58 
REFERENCES...........................................................................................................59 
Appendix 1 – Product types .......................................................................................60 
Appendix 2 – Perceptions of the health risk of different substances..........................61 
Appendix 3 – Locations..............................................................................................62 
 
 
 
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Summary 
 
The principal aims of the 2006 National Household Survey of Legal Party Pill Use 
were to provide national population statistics on the prevalence and patterns of legal 
party pill use in New Zealand, and to provide data on the harms and problems related 
to the use of legal party pills in New Zealand.  
 
The survey consisted of a random national household sample of 2,010 people aged 
13-45 years old collected using the Centre for Social and Health Outcomes Research 
and Evaluation (SHORE) and Whariki’s in-house computer assisted telephone 
interviewing (CATI) system. 
 
 
Prevalence and patterns of use 
 
One in five (20.3%; 18.4-22.3) of the sample had ever tried legal party pills, and one 
in seven (15.3%; 13.6-17.1) had used legal party pills in the preceding 12 months. 
 
Levels of last year use of legal party pills were highest among the 18-24 year old age 
range with 33.9% (25.3-43.6) of 18-19 year olds and 38.0% (31.3-45.2) of 20-24 year 
olds having used legal party pills in the preceding year. 
 
Males were more likely than females to have used legal party pills in the previous 
year in a number of age groups including among 13-14 year olds (4.4% vs. 0%), 20-
24 year olds (48.5% vs. 27.9%, p=0.0043), 30-34 year olds (15.4% vs. 6.6%, 
p=0.0179), 35-39 year olds (10.7% vs. 2.2%, p=0.0032) and 40-45 year olds (7.6% vs. 
2.5%, p=0.0252). 
 
Maori were more likely than non-Maori to have used legal party pills in the preceding 
12 months (19.9% vs. 14.5%, p=0.0408). By age group, Maori were more likely than 
non-Maori to have used legal party pills in the preceding year among those aged 25-
29 years old (35.4% vs. 15.6%, p=0.025). 
 
Frequency of use 
 
Nearly half (45.6%) of those who had used legal party pills in the previous 12 months 
had only used them 1-2 times in the preceding year. One in 18 (5.7%) users had used 
legal party pills weekly or more often over the last year (ie. 50+ times in a year). 
 
Means of administration 
 
Nearly all (98.8%) of those who had used legal party pills in the previous year 
typically ‘swallowed’ their legal party pills. Only one user (0.6%) reported they 
typically injected their legal party pills. 
 
Quantity used 
 
The mean number of legal party pills taken on a typical occasion was 2.6 pills (2.3-2.9 
pills). When asked what was the greatest number of legal party pills they had taken in 
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a single occasion, four out of 10 (41.6%) users said four or more pills, one in five 
(20.2%) said six or more pills, and one in nine (10.9%) said eight or more pills at one 
time. 
 
Location of use 
 
Public places were often the most common locations in which to use legal party pills 
with half of users either using ‘all’ (25.2%) or ‘most’ (26.4%) of their legal party pills 
in public places. Work locations were the least common place to use legal party pills. 
 
Approximately one in six (15.9%) users had completed at least ‘some’ of their driving 
under the influence of legal party pills. 
 
 
Poly drug use 
 
Use with alcohol 
 
Approximately one in three (32.8%, 26.9-39.4) legal party pill users said they drank 
‘more’ alcohol when using legal party pills. 
 
Substances used in combination 
 
Nearly nine out of 10 (86.4%, 81.6-90.1) legal party pill users said they use other 
substances with their legal party pills. The most common substance used with legal 
party pills was alcohol (91.1%, 86.3-94.3), followed by tobacco (39.6%, 33.1-46.6) 
and cannabis (22.3%, 17.0-28.7). 
 
Substances used to recover 
 
Approximately one third (32.2%, 26.5-38.5) of legal party pill users indicated they 
usually used other substances to help them recover from their legal party pill use. The 
substances most commonly used were so called ‘recovery pills’ (50.2%, 38.8-61.6), 
cannabis (28.3%, 19.3-39.5), tobacco (27.5%, 18.3-39.0) and alcohol (10.7%, 5.1-
21.2). 
 
Other drug use 
 
Nearly all the legal party pill users (97.2%) had used other drugs in the preceding 12 
months. Legal party pill users generally had much higher levels of illicit drug use than 
the wider population. For example, 15.9% of legal party pill users had used 
amphetamines in the last year compared to 3.7% of the population in 2003. 
 
 
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Harms from legal party pills 
 
Areas of life harmed 
 
The areas of life most commonly reported harmed by legal party pill use were ‘energy 
and vitality’ (19.3%), ‘health’ (14.6%), ‘financial position’ (8.8%) and ‘outlook on 
life’ (6.3%). 
 
Physical problems 
 
The physical problems most often experienced from legal party pill use were ‘poor 
appetite’ (41.1%), ‘hot/cold flushes’ (30.6%), ‘heavy sweating’ (23.4%), ‘stomach 
pains/nausea’ (22.2%), ‘headaches’ (21.9%) and ‘tremors and shakes’ (18.4%). 
 
Psychological problems 
 
The psychological problems most often experienced from legal party pill use were 
‘trouble sleeping’ (50.4%), ‘loss of energy’ (18.4%), ‘strange thoughts’ (15.6%), 
‘mood swings’ (14.8%), ‘confusion’ (12.1%) and ‘irritability’ (11.4%). 
 
Accessing health services 
 
One in 100 (1.0%) users had visited a hospital emergency department and one in 250 
(0.4%) users had been admitted to a hospital in relation to their legal party pill use in 
the previous 12 months. 
 
 
Availability, price and potency 
 
Availability 
 
Three quarters (75.7%; 69.8-80.8) of users described the current availability of legal 
party pills as ‘very easy’ and a further one in five (21.0%; 16.3-26.6) described 
availability as ‘easy’. 
 
Potency 
 
Half of the users (49.8%; 42.2-57.5) said the strength of legal party pills was ‘higher’ 
compared to a year ago 
 
Dollar expenditures and price 
 
The median dollar amount spent on legal party pills per user on a typical occasion was 
$40 (mean $39, range $8-$200). 
 
Search time 
 
Two thirds (66.9%; 60.8-72.6) of legal party pill buyers said they could purchase legal 
party pills in ‘less than 20 minutes’. 
 
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Extent of dependency 
 
One in 45 (2.2%) of last year legal party pill users were classified as dependent on 
legal party pills by scoring greater than four on the combined five questions of a Short 
Dependency Scale (SDS). 
 
Gateway effects  
 
Current legal party pill use and illicit drug use 
 
Of those who were current legal party pill users and current illicit drug users, 
approximately three out of 10 (27.9%; 19.9-37.8) said they only ‘use legal party pills 
when they cannot get illicit drugs’. A further three out of 10 (26.9%; 18.8-36.9) 
indicated that they ‘use legal party pills with illegal drugs to enhance their effects or 
the duration of effects’. The remaining four out of 10 (45.2%; 35.6-55.1) reported that 
they ‘use legal party pills so they do not have to use illegal drugs’. 
 
Past legal party pill use and illicit drug use 
 
Of those who indicated some kind of past relationship between their legal party pill 
and illicit drug use, one in seven (13.5%; 8.4-20.8) said they had ‘started out using 
legal party pills but now mostly use illegal drugs’. Four out of 10 (42.5%; 34.1-51.4) 
reported they ‘now use both illegal drugs and legal party pills (no change in level of 
illegal drug use)’. The final group (44.1%; 35.5-53.0) indicated they ‘were using illicit 
drugs but now mostly use legal party pills’.  
 
 
User perceptions 
 
Knowledge of product safety instructions 
 
One in six (15.5%; 11.5-20.6) users indicated they did not know how many legal party 
pills it was safe to take in a single night. One in five (21.2%; 16.4-26.8) users did not 
know what other substances should not be taken with legal party pills. One in 10 
(9.5%; 6.2-14.5) users did not know which groups of people should not use legal party 
pills. 
 
Perceptions of the risk of drug use 
 
Nearly three-quarters (74.6%; 68.5-79.9) of legal party pill users thought the regular 
use of methamphetamine was an ‘extreme health risk’. Over six out of 10 (63.8%; 
56.4-70.7) legal party pill users considered the regular use of GHB to be an ‘extreme 
health risk’. Legal party pill users considered the use of alcohol, cannabis and legal 
party pills to pose roughly the same level of risk, with less than 10% of users 
considering the regular use of these substances to be an ‘extreme health risk’. 
 
 
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Policy and legal party pills  
 
Age identification  
 
Approximately three out of 10 (26.7%; 15.8-41.3) legal party pill buyers under 20 
years old had ‘never’ been asked for age identification when attempting to purchase 
legal party pills. 
 
Refused purchase  
 
Eight out of 10 (80.7%; 65.4-90.3) legal party pill buyers under the age of 20 had 
‘never’ been refused purchase of legal party pills. 
 
Current regulation 
 
Six out of 10 (60.6%; 58.2-63.1) survey respondents felt that the current regulation of 
legal party pills was ‘too light’. One third (36.2%; 33.9-38.7) of respondents said 
current regulation was ‘about right’. One in 32 (3.1%; 2.3-4.2) respondents believed 
that the current regulation of legal party pills was ‘too heavy’. 
 
Support for options to strengthen regulation 
 
Of those who believed the current regulation of legal party pills should be 
strengthened (60.6%, n=1187), six out of 10 wanted to see the sale of legal party pills 
‘prohibited from convenience stores’, about half wanted sellers of legal party pills to 
have to obtain a ‘special license to sell these products’, a further half of respondents 
wanted ‘mandatory health warnings on all packaging’ and ‘age restrictions on 
purchasing to be increased to 20 years old’. A similar proportion wanted legal party 
pills to be ‘prohibited for everyone’. Approximately one-third indicated support for ‘a 
total ban on advertising’, ‘prohibition from places that sold alcohol’ and ‘restricting 
the total dosage of BZP sold in a single pack’. 
 
Support for options to relax regulation 
 
Of those who believed the current regulation of legal party pills should be relaxed 
(3.1%, n=41), approximately half wanted the legal age required to purchase party pills 
to be lowered to 16 years old, a similar proportion of respondents wanted the 
advertising of legal party pills to be permitted in major media networks, and about 
three out of 10 wanted there to be no age restrictions on the purchase of legal party 
pills. 
 
 
 
 
 
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Introduction 
 
The principal aims of the 2006 National Household Survey of Legal Party Pill Use 
were to provide national population statistics on the prevalence and patterns of legal 
party pill use in New Zealand, and to provide data on the harms and problems related 
to the use of legal party pills in New Zealand. The study was also undertaken to 
investigate how the use of legal party pills was interacting with use of other drug 
types including alcohol and illicit drugs, such as amphetamines. This report also 
presents data on users’ perceptions of the benefits and health risks of using legal party 
pills and how the current R18 restriction on the sale of legal party pills is impacting 
on younger users’ ability to purchase these products. Findings are presented on the 
availability and potency of legal party pills, dollar expenditures on these substances, 
and the context of their use. All respondents to the survey were asked their opinion of 
the current regulation of legal party pills and were invited to indicate what future 
regulatory changes they would support. 
 
 

Background 
 
Legal party pills emerged in New Zealand around the year 2000 and have become 
increasingly popular in recent years. They are sold under a wide range of product 
names in New Zealand, including ‘Charge’, ‘Kandi’ and ‘Red Hearts’ (see Appendix 
1). Legal party pills are used in recreational contexts, to enhance confidence and 
extend hours of socialising, and are also used in professional and domestic contexts to 
improve concentration and ability to work for long periods of time without a break. 
Legal party pills are taken as substitutes for illicit drugs, but also in combination with 
them to prolong the duration of effects (Janes, 2004). 
 
The main active ingredients of legal party pills are benzylpiperazine (BZP) and 
triflourophenylmethylpiperazine (TFMPP). These substances are members of the 
piperazine group and are produced synthetically. BZP has been found to have effects 
similar to low potency amphetamine (i.e. 10% the potency of dexamphetamine), while 
TFMPP is reported to have effects similar to ecstasy (MDMA - 3,4-
methylenedioxymethamphetamine) (Bye et al., 1973, Campbell et al., 1973, Expert 
Advisory Committee on Drugs, 2004, p.5, Gee et al., 2005). A 100mg dose of BZP is 
said to have effects of between 6-8 hours duration (Expert Advisory Committee on 
Drugs, 2004, p.6). The individual characteristics of different legal party pill products 
are achieved largely by moderating the absolute quantities, and mix, of BZP and 
TFMPP to achieve the desired level of stimulant versus emphatic and hallucinogenic 
effects (Janes, 2004). 
 
Anecdotal and media reports suggest that adolescents and young adults are the main 
users of BZP in New Zealand. There are also reports of people in their late twenties 
and early thirties using these substances to avoid problems with law enforcement 
which may come from using illicit drugs, such as methamphetamine and ecstasy (New 
Zealand Herald, 2005b). Single parents, middle aged people and professionals have 
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also been known to use BZP to help cope with household chores, child supervision, 
working long hours and shift work. 
 
There have been a number of reported incidents of users suffering serious side-effects 
from legal party pills (New Zealand Herald, 2005a, Hayman, 2005). Some of these 
incidents have resulted in medical emergencies and hospital admissions, as well as 
attention from St. John Ambulance services (New Zealand Herald, 2005a). A recent 
New Zealand Medical Journal article described 80 BZP-related Emergency 
Department admissions occurring at Christchurch Hospital over a six month period in 
2005 (Gee et al., 2005). The authors concluded that BZP can cause unpredictable and 
serious toxicity in some people (Gee et al., 2005). The authors advise that those with 
seizure disorders or coronary disease should avoid using BZP, as should those taking 
certain prescription medicines (Gee et al., 2005). The intravenous use of BZP has also 
been reported by some drug and alcohol practitioners working in New Zealand. Legal 
party pill use has been linked with one case of drug psychosis requiring admittance to 
a Christchurch acute psychiatric facility (Saunders, 2005). 
 
Based on industry figures, it has been estimated that approximately five million legal 
party pills have been manufactured in New Zealand since 2000 (Expert Advisory 
Committee on Drugs, 2004, p.4, New Zealand Herald, 2005b, Chapple, 2005). 
Current sales are estimated at a rate of 50,000 four pill packs every month (New 
Zealand Herald, 2005b). Best estimates are that the industry has annual sales of $24 
million dollars (New Zealand Herald, 2005b). The strength of BZP products has 
increased steadily since their introduction, from a standard dose of 70 to 80 mg per 
dose to 250 mg per dose (New Zealand Herald, 2005b). Bags of pure BZP, known as 
Hummer, are now being marketed in some areas (New Zealand Herald, 2005b). Legal 
party pills are currently sold from a wide range of retail outlets in New Zealand 
including corner dairies, liquor stores, service stations, adult entertainment shops, 
mobile vendors, pubs, clubs and dance party events and from 24 hour convenience 
stores (Expert Advisory Committee on Drugs, 2004, p.7). BZP is sold in pill, capsule 
and powder form. 
 
The Expert Advisory Committee on Drugs (EACD) considered the classification of 
BZP and related substances in March 2004. The EACD concluded that there was 
insufficient evidence available to classify these substances and recommended that 
research into the prevalence and harms of BZP products in New Zealand be 
commissioned to further inform the regulation of these substances (Expert Advisory 
Committee on Drugs, 2004, p.4). One of the risks to public health of legal party pills 
discussed in the EACD report was the role legal party pills may play in the initiation 
of use of more harmful illicit drugs, such as methamphetamine (i.e. ‘gateway in’) 
(Expert Advisory Committee on Drugs, 2004, p.6). Conversely, the EACD noted BZP 
may play a role in reversing illicit drug use or avoiding it all together (i.e. ‘gateway 
out’). In June 2005, BZP was classified under the newly created Class D category of 
the Misuse of Drugs Act 1975 and its sale and supply restricted to those 18 years and 
older. The advertising of legal party pills was prohibited from major media networks 
including television, radio, newspapers and magazines. 
 
To further inform the regulatory control of BZP in New Zealand, the National Drug 
Policy Discretionary Fund set the study of the population prevalence of legal party pill 
use and related harms as a research priority for the 2005 funding round. A research 
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proposal for a national household survey of legal party pill use was developed by 
researchers at the Centre for Social and Health Outcomes Research and Evaluation 
(SHORE), at Massey University. This proposal, along with several other BZP 
research projects, was selected for funding in 2006. This report presents the findings 
of the 2006 National Household Survey of Legal Party Pill Use in New Zealand. 
 
 
Aims 
 
The aims of the 2006 National Household Survey of Legal Party Pill Use were: 
 
•  To identify the population prevalence and patterns of use of legal party pills in 
New Zealand 
 
•  To identify levels of poly drug use by legal party pill users 
 
•  To measure the harms and problems experienced by legal party pill users 
 
•  To measure the level of availability of, and accessibility to, legal party pills 
 
•  To explore the role legal party pills may play in the initiation of illicit drug use 
(i.e. ‘Gateway in’ hypothesis) or alternatively the cessation of illicit drug use 
(i.e. ‘Gateway out’ hypothesis) 
 
•  To explore young people’s perceptions of the benefits and risks of legal party 
pill use 
 
•  To identify the demographic characteristics of legal party pill users. 
 
 
 
Method 
 
The 2006 National Household Survey of Legal Party Pill Use consisted of a random 
national household sample of 2,010 people aged 13-45 years old, collected using the 
Centre for Social and Health Outcomes Research and Evaluation (SHORE) and 
Whariki’s in-house computer assisted telephone interviewing (CATI) system. To 
represent the different socio-economic characteristics of the New Zealand population 
the country was divided into 34 strata. Each telephone number was tried at least 10 
times on different days and times of the day in an effort to reach those seldom at 
home. Within each household one person was randomly selected for an interview. 
Each interviewer worked at a computer workstation and entered answers directly into 
a database. The computer displayed the survey questions for the interviewer to read, 
and performed logical checking of answers as the information was entered. 
Respondents were informed that the study was being conducted on behalf of the 
Ministry of Health and that everything they said would be confidential. Interviewing 
was completed from February to March 2006. An overall response rate of 69% was 
achieved. 
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Analysis 
 
The sample data were weighted by eligible household size to adjust for the selection 
of only one person from each household. All analysis was conducted using the 
SUDAAN software package, incorporating the effects of weighting and stratification. 
Prevalence levels and corresponding confidence intervals were calculated using 
logistic regression. Regression analysis was used to calculate means and confidence 
intervals for continuous variables. All comparisons were tested for significance at the 
95% confidence level. Confidence intervals and the results of statistical tests are only 
reported where there are at least 10 respondents in each comparison group. 
 
 
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CHAPTER 1 – PREVALENCE AND PATTERNS OF LEGAL 
PARTY PILL USE 
 
 

Introduction 
This chapter presents data on the population prevalence of legal party pills in New 
Zealand. Respondents were first asked whether they had ever tried legal party pills 
and, if they had done so, whether they had used any in the last year. Those who had 
used legal party pills in the last year were asked a series of questions about their 
patterns of use, age of first use, reasons for changing levels of use and context of use. 
 
Ever tried legal party pills 
One in five (20.3%; 18.4-22.3) of the sample had ever tried legal party pills. Levels of 
lifetime use of legal party pills was highest among the 18-29 year age range with 
40.7% (31.5-50.5) of 18-19 year olds and 48.8% (41.6-56.0) of 20-24 year olds 
having ever used legal party pills. One in six (16.3%; 11.7%-22.3%) of 15-17 year 
olds had ever tried legal party pills, while only 3.0% (1.0-8.5) of 13-14 year olds had 
tried legal party pills. Overall, males were more likely to have ever tried legal party 
pills than females (24.2% vs. 16.9%, p=0.0003). In several age groups males were 
more likely than females to have tried legal party pills including those aged 20-24 
years (58.2% vs. 39.7%, p=0.0135), 30-34 years (24.4% vs. 12.5%, p=0.0104) and 
35-39 years (15.3% vs. 6.4%, p=0.0153) (Figure 1.1). 
 
Figure 1.1: Ever tried legal party pills by age and gender, 2006 
 
Percentage 
100
90
Male
80
Female
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
13-14
15-17
18-19
20-24
25-29
30-34
35-39
40-45
Age group
 
 
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Maori were more likely than non-Maori to have ever tried legal party pills (25.7% vs. 
19.4%, p=0.035). Maori were more likely than non-Maori to have tried legal party 
pills among those aged 25-29 years old (46.2% vs. 24.0%, p=0.0267) and 35-39 years 
old (26.4% vs. 8.5%, p=0.0063) (Figure 1.2). 
 
Figure 1.2: Proportion of Maori and non-Maori who had ever tried legal party pills by 
age group, 2006 
 
Percentage 
100
90
Maori
80
Non-Maori
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
13-14
15-17
18-19
20-24
25-29
30-34
35-39
40-45
Age group
 
 
Age of first use of legal party pills 
All of those who had ever tried legal party pills were asked at what age they first 
started using legal party pills. Common ages at which legal party pills were first tried 
were 15 years old (7.3%), 16 years old (9.2%), 17 years old (9.7%) and 18 years old 
(12.8%). There was no difference in the average age at which legal party pills were 
first tried between males and females (22.8 vs. 21.4 years, p=0.1083) (Figures 1.3 and 
1.4). 
 
Figure 1.3: Age at which males first tried legal party pills, 2006 
 
Percentage 100
90
80
70
60
Age
50
Cumulative Age
40
30
20
10
0
12 14 16 18 20 22 24 26 28 30 32 34 36 38 40 42 44
Age first used
 
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Figure 1.4: Age at which females first tried legal party pills, 2006 
 
Percentage 100
90
80
70
60
Age
50
Cumulative Age
40
30
20
10
0
12 14 16 18 20 22 24 26 28 30 32 34 36 38 40 42 44
Age first used
 
 
Reasons for never using legal party pills 
Those respondents who had never tried legal party pills (79.7%; 77.7-81.6) were 
asked what reasons kept them from using legal party pills. Respondents were given 
the opportunity to provide as many reasons as they felt were relevant. Responses were 
initially coded according to a set of categories developed in earlier surveys of drug 
use in New Zealand (see Black and Casswell, 1993, Field and Casswell, 1999, 
Wilkins et al., 2002). Reasons which did not fit into these existing categories (ie, were 
initially coded as ‘others’) were grouped into newly developed categories as required. 
The most commonly cited reason for having never tried legal party pills was ‘just 
don’t like them’, followed by ‘not in social scene’ and ‘health related reasons’ (Table 
1.1). 
 
Table 1.1: Reasons for never using legal party pills, 2006 
 
Reason 
Percent (%)
Lower CI (%)
Upper CI (%) 
Did not like them 
72.3 
69.7
74.7 
Not in social scene 
19.5 
17.4
21.7 
Health related reasons 
15.7 
13.8
17.8 
Never heard of them 
4.9 
3.9
6.3 
Too old 
4.0 
3.1
5.2 
Against my religious belief 
3.6 
2.7
4.8 
Family responsibility/kids 
3.3 
2.4
4.5 
Too expensive  
3.0 
2.2
4.1 
Not enough information on effects 
3.0 
2.2
4.0 
Saw bad effects in others  
2.6 
1.9
3.7 
Family reasons 
2.2 
1.5
3.2 
Under age/ risk of getting caught 
2.2 
1.5
3.2 
(Percentages are of respondents who had never tried legal party pills  
excluding don’t know and refused – each respondent could give  
more than one reason; n=1567) 
 
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Last year use of legal party pills 
One in seven (15.3%; 13.6-17.1) of the sample had used legal party pills in the 
preceding 12 months. Levels of last year legal party pill use were highest among the 
18-24 year old age range, with 33.9% (25.3-43.6) of 18-19 year olds and 38.0% (31.3-
45.2) of 20-24 year olds having used legal party pills in the preceding year. One in six 
(16.3%; 11.7%-22.3%) of 15-17 year olds had used legal party pills in the last year, 
while only 3.0% (0.8-8.4) of 13-14 year olds had used legal party pills in the last 12 
months. Overall, males were more likely than females to have used legal party pills in 
the last year (19.8% vs. 11.4%, p<0.0001). Males were more likely than females to 
have used legal party pills in the previous year in a number of age groups including 
among 13-14 year olds (4.4% vs. 0%), 20-24 year olds (48.5% vs. 27.9%, p=0.0043), 
30-34 year olds (15.4% vs. 6.6%, p=0.0179), 35-39 year olds (10.7% vs. 2.2%, 
p=0.0032) and 40-45 year olds (7.6% vs. 2.5%, p=0.0252) (Figure 1.5). 
 
Figure 1.5: Last year use of legal party pills by age and gender, 2006 
 
Percentage 
100
90
Male
80
Female
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
13-14
15-17
18-19
20-24
25-29
30-34
35-39
40-45
Age group
 
 
 
Maori were more likely than non-Maori to have used legal party pills in the preceding 
12 months (19.9% vs. 14.5%, p=0.0408). Maori were more likely than non-Maori to 
have used legal party pills in the preceding year among those aged 25-29 years old 
(35.4% vs. 15.6%, p=0.025) (Figure 1.6). 
 
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Figure 1.6: Proportion of Maori and non-Maori who had used legal party pills in the 
last year by age group, 2006 
 
Percentage 
100
90
Maori
80
Non-Maori
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
13-14
15-17
18-19
20-24
25-29
30-34
35-39
40-45
Age group
 
 
Use of legal party pills in the last 30 days 
One in 22 (4.6%; 3.7-5.8) of the sample had used legal party pills in the preceding 
month. Levels of legal party pill use in the last 30 days were highest among the 18-24 
year old age range with 13.1% (7.9-21.1) of 18-19 year olds and 10.5% (6.8-15.7) of 
20-24 year olds having used legal party pills in the previous month. One in seventeen 
(5.8%; 3.3%-9.9%) of 15-17 year olds had used legal party pills in the last month. 
Overall, males were more likely than females to have used legal party pills in the last 
month (6.4% vs. 3.1%, p=0.0018). 
 
Changes in legal party pill use 
Respondents who had ever tried legal party pills were asked how their use of legal 
party pills had changed in the last year. One in 12 respondents (8.4%; 5.8-12.0) said 
they were using ‘more’ legal party pills, one in six respondents (16.0%; 12.5-20.5) 
were using at the ‘same’ level, and a further one in seven of the sample (14.7%; 11.2-
19.2) reported they were using ‘less’ legal party pills. The largest proportion of 
respondents (60.8%; 55.3-66.0) had ‘stopped’ using legal party pills. 
 
Last year legal party pill users who indicated they had changed their use of legal party 
pills were asked about their reasons for changing their level of use. They were given 
the opportunity to provide as many reasons as they felt were relevant. Responses were 
initially coded according to a set of categories developed in earlier surveys of drug 
use (see Black and Casswell, 1993, Field and Casswell, 1999, Wilkins et al., 2002). 
Reasons which did not fit into these existing categories (ie, were initially coded as 
‘others’) were grouped into newly developed categories as required.  
 
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Reasons for using less legal party pills 
The most commonly reported reasons given for using less legal party pills were the 
‘hang over’ effect, ‘no longer party as much’, ‘physical health reasons’, ‘don’t like 
them’ and ‘too expensive’ (Table 1.2). 
 
Table 1.2: Reasons for using less legal party pills, 2006 
 
Reason Percent 
(%)
Hang over/ come down too bad 
31.8 
Don’t party as much now 
30.3 
Physical health reasons 
15.2 
Didn’t like them 
9.8 
Too expensive 
9.1 
Effects wore off 
7.6 
Mental health reasons 
6.8 
No longer fun/got boring 
5.3
New friends/social scene 
3.8 
Social pressure 
3.0 
Using more alcohol now 
3.0 
Too old/got older 
3.0
Don’t earn enough money 
2.3 
Fear of addiction 
2.3 
(Percentages are of respondents who reported using less legal party pills  
excluding don’t know and refused – each respondent could give  
more than one reason; n=52) 
 
 
Reasons for having stopped using legal party pills 
Just over half (52.5%; 45.3-59.7) of those who had stopped using legal party pills said 
the reason they stopped using was they were ‘just experimenting’ or ‘didn’t like them’ 
(Table 1.3). Nearly three out of 10 (27.1%, 20.4-37.2) said the ‘hang-over’ from using 
legal party pills caused them to stop using. One in six (17.9%; 12.1-26.8) cited ‘health 
reasons’ as the reason they stopped using legal party pills. The financial cost of using 
legal party pills was mentioned by approximately one in eight (11.8%; 7.7-17.5) as 
the reason why they stopped using. 
 
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Table 1.3 Reasons for having stopped using legal party pills, 2006 
 
Reason Percent 
(%)
Just don’t like them/no need/Just 
52.5 
experimenting 
Hangover/bad come down effects 
27.1 
Health related reasons 
17.9 
Too expensive/Didn’t earn enough 
11.8 
8.5 
Not in social scene/Don’t party as much now 
Too old 
5.4 
Family responsibility/kids 
4.9 
Saw bad effects on others 
3.3 
Prefer drinking alcohol 
2.0 
Pregnant 2.0 
Effects wore off 
2.0 
Fear of addiction 
1.3 
No time/too busy 
1.3 
Social pressure 
1.3 
Prefer other illegal drugs 
1.1 
Job related reasons 
0.7 
Against my religion/religious belief' 
0.5 
Family reasons 
0.4 
Lost too much weight' 
0.4 
(Percentages are of respondents who reported having stopped legal party pill use  
excluding don’t know and refused – each respondent could give  
more than one reason; n=232) 
 
 
Reasons for using more legal party pills 
The most commonly cited reasons for using more legal party pills were ‘liked the 
effects’, ‘partying much longer’, ‘part of the social scene’, and ‘experimenting’ (Table 
1.4). 
 
Table 1.4: Reasons for using more legal party pills, 2006 
 
Reason Percent 
(%)
Like the effect/its fun 
32.4 
Partying much longer 
23.0 
Part of the scene 
14.9 
Experimenting 8.1 
Easier to get/more around 
6.8 
Can afford more/earn more 
5.4 
Now old enough to buy them 
5.4 
Need more to get same effect 
4.1 
New friends 
4.1 
Social pressure 
4.1 
Like to try the new pills when they 
4.1 
(Percentages are of respondents who reported using more legal party pills  
excluding don’t know and refused – each respondent could give  
more than one reason; n=31) 
 
 
 
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Frequency of legal party pill use 
Nearly half (45.6%) of those who had used legal party pills in the previous 12 months 
had only used them 1-2 times in the preceding year (Figure 1.7). A further quarter of 
last year users (26.6%) had used legal party pills only 3-5 times in the previous year. 
One in 10 (10.5%) legal party pill users had used legal party pills approximately 
monthly (ie. 10-19 times in a year). One in 18 (5.7%) users had used legal party pills 
weekly or more often over the last year (ie. 50+ times in a year). On average, males 
had used legal party pills on more occasions than females over the last 12 months 
(16.2 times vs. 7.3 times, p=0.0399). 
 
Figure 1.7: Number of times used legal party pills in the last 12 months by gender, 
2006 
 
Percentage 
100
90
Male
80
Female
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
1-2
3-5
6-9
10-19
20-49
50+
Num ber  of  tim es
 
 
 
Means of administration 
Nearly all (98.8%) of those respondents who had used legal party pills in the previous 
year typically ‘swallowed’ their legal party pills. Two users typically ‘snorted’ their 
legal party pills in powder form. One user reported they typically injected their legal 
party pills in the powder form. One in 83 (1.2%; n=3) of last year legal party pill users 
had ever injected legal party pills. 
 
Number of legal party pills taken 
The mean number of legal party pills taken on a typical occasion was 2.6 pills (2.3-2.9 
pills). Males consumed a greater number of legal party pills on average than females 
on a typical occasion (2.8 vs. 2.2 pills, p=0.0117) (Figure 1.8). When asked what was 
the greatest number of legal party pills they had taken on one occasion, four out of 10 
(41.6%) users said four or more pills, one in five (20.2%) said six or more pills, and 
one in nine (10.9%) said eight or more pills at one time. 
 
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Figure 1.8: Number of legal party pills taken on a typical occasion by sex 
 
Percentage 
50
45
Male
40
Female
35
30
25
20
15
10
5
0
0.5
1
2
3
4
5+
Num ber of pills
 
 
Binged on legal party pills 
The interviewer explained that the binge use of legal party pills was defined as using 
legal party pills continuously for 24 hours or more. One in six (17.4%, 13.0-23.0) of 
those who had used legal party pills in the previous year reported they had binged on 
them in this way in the previous 12 months. There was no difference in the incidence 
of bingeing on legal party pills between males and females (19.2% vs. 14.8%, 
p=0.383). Approximately half (52.4%) of those who had binged on legal party pills 
had done so only once in the last year (Figure 1.9). Approximately one in five 
(19.4%) of those who had binged on legal party pills had done so ten or more times in 
the last year. 
 
Figure 1.9: Number of times binged on legal party pills in the last year 
 
Percentage 
100
90
80
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
1
2
3-9
10+
Num ber  of  tim es
 
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Location of use 
Those who had used legal party pills in the previous year were asked how much of 
their legal party pill use took place in ‘private homes’, how much took place in 
‘public places’ and how much took place in ‘work places’. Public places were often 
the most common locations to use legal party pills with half of users either using ‘all’ 
(25.2%) or ‘most’ (26.4%) of their legal party pills in public places (Figure 1.10). The 
interviewer elaborated that public places meant places such as ‘music concerts, on the 
street, at the beach or park, pub, bar or at a dance party’. Private homes were also 
popular places to use legal party pills with one in three users either saying they had 
used ‘all’ (16.7%) or ‘most’ (16.7%) of their legal party pills in private homes. Work 
locations were reported as the least common place to use legal party pills with nine 
out of 10 (91.1%) users saying they had used no legal party pills in work locations in 
the last 12 months. 
 
Figure 1.10: Proportion of last year users using in different locations, 2006 
 
Percentage 
100
90
All
80
Most
70
Some
60
Hardly any
50
None
40
30
20
10
0
Private homes
Work
Public places
Location
 
 
 
Legal party pill use and driving 
Those who had used legal party pills in the previous year were asked how much of 
their driving was done under the influence of legal party pills in the last 12 months. 
Two thirds of last year legal party pill users (66.7%) had completed no driving under 
the influence of legal party pills (Figure 1.11). Approximately one in six (15.9%) 
users had completed at least ‘some’ of their driving under the influence of legal party 
pills. 
 
 
 
 

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Figure 1.11: Proportion who drove under the influence of legal party pills, 2006 
 
Percentage 
100
90
80
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
Al
Most
Some
Hardly any
None
Am ount of Driving
 
 
 
 
 
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CHAPTER 2 - POLY DRUG USE AND LEGAL PARTY PILLS 
 
 

Introduction 
An important issue related to legal party pills is how their use contributes to the use of 
other drug types. These relationships are explored further in Chapter 6. This chapter 
presents findings on the substances that legal party pill users reported they used in 
combination with legal party pills and the substances they used to help them recover 
from the effects of using legal party pills. The chapter also provides a summary of all 
the other drug types that those who had used legal party pills had used in the previous 
year. 
 
 

Legal party pills and level of drinking  
Those who had used legal party pills in the last year were asked if they drank ‘more’, 
‘the same’ amount or ‘less’ alcohol when using legal party pills. Four out of 10 legal 
party pill users (39.7%, 33.2-46.5) said they drank ‘less’ alcohol while using legal 
party pills, while three out of 10 (27.5%, 21.8-34.1) reported they drank ‘the same’ 
amount of alcohol while using legal party pills (Figure 2.1). Approximately one in 
three (32.8%, 26.9-39.4) legal party pill users said they drank ‘more’ alcohol when 
using legal party pills. 
 
Figure 2.1: Impact of legal party pills on level of drinking, 2006 
 
Percentage 
50
45
40
35
30
25
20
15
10
5
0
More
Less
Same
Am ount drunk
 
 
 

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Substances used in combination with legal party pills 
Those who had used legal party pills in the previous 12 months were asked what 
substances, if any, they usually use with legal party pills. Nearly nine out of 10 
(86.4%, 81.6-90.1) legal party pill users said they use other substances with their legal 
party pills. The most common substance used with legal party pills was alcohol 
(91.1%, 86.3-94.3), followed by tobacco (39.6%, 33.1-46.6) and cannabis (22.3%, 
17.0-28.7) (Table 2.1). The next most commonly used substances were so called 
‘recovery pills’ which are often sold from retail outlets that sell legal party pills. 
Manufacturers claim that these substances assist drug users to recover from the hang-
over effects and long term harms associated with legal party pill use and other drug 
use. Ecstasy (MDMA) was the amphetamine type stimulant (ATS) drug most 
commonly used with legal party pills, with approximately one in twenty (5.3%, 2.8-
9.5) users saying they usually used it with their legal party pills. Amphetamine and 
crystal methamphetamine were only rarely used with legal party pills (Table 2.1). 
 
Table 2.1: Substances used in combination with legal party pills, 2006 
 
Drug type 
Percent (%)
Alcohol 91.1 
Tobacco/ cigarettes 
39.6 
Cannabis 22.3 
Recovery pills 
9.2 
Ecstasy (E, MDMA) 
5.3 
Nitrous oxide  
4.5 
Hallucinogenic mushrooms  
2.4 
Amphetamines (meth, P, pure) 
1.3
LSD 1.3 
GHB (gamma-hydroxybutyrate) 
1.1
Rush (Amyl nitrate, Butyl nitrate) 
1.1 
Cocaine 1.0 
Ice (crystal meth) 
0.6 
Other opiates 
0.6 
Kava 0.6 
Other hallucinogens (PCP, datura) 
0.5 
 
 
Substances used to recover from legal party pills 
Those who had used legal party pills in the previous 12 months were asked what 
substances, if any, they usually used to help them ‘come down’ or recover from using 
legal party pills. Approximately one third (32.2%, 26.5-38.5) of legal party pill users 
indicated they usually used other substances to help them recover from their legal 
party pill use. The substances most commonly used were ‘recovery pills’ (50.2%, 
38.8-61.6), cannabis (28.3%, 19.3-39.5) and tobacco (27.5%, 18.3-39.0) (Table 2.2). 
 
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Table 2.2: Substances used to help recover from legal party pills, 2006 
 
Drug type 
Percent (%)
Recovery pills 
50.2 
Cannabis 28.3 
Tobacco/cigarettes 27.5 
Alcohol 10.7 
Ecstasy (E,MDMA) 
4.3 
Ice (crystal meth) 
1.7 
Nitrous oxide (laughing gas) 
1.7 
Tranquillizers (downers,valium,serepans) 1.3 
Hallucinogenic mushrooms 
1.3 
Crack cocaine 
1.3 
Amphetamines (meth,P,pure) 
0.4 
LSD 0.4 
Cocaine 0.4 
 
 
Other drug use by legal party pill users 
Legal party pill users were asked whether they had recently used a list of other drug 
types, including alcohol and tobacco and twenty-four other drug types. Nearly all the 
legal party pill users (97.2%) had used other drugs in the preceding 12 months. The 
drug types they most commonly used are summarised in Table 2.3. Six out of 10 
(60.8%; 54.3, 66.9) legal party pill users had used cannabis in the last year, one in five 
(21.0%; 16.3, 26.6) had used ecstasy in the last year and one in six (15.9%; 11.8, 
21.1) had used amphetamines in the last year. One in seven (14.4%, 10.4, 19.6) legal 
party pill users had used nitrous oxide in the preceding 12 months and one in 10 
(10.0%; 6.8-14.4) had used LSD in the previous year. One in 29 (3.5%; 1.8-6.5) legal 
party pill users reported they had used crystal methamphetamine in the previous year. 
 
Table 2.3: Other drug types used by legal party pill users in the previous year, 2006 
 
Drug type 
Percent (%) 
Alcohol' 94.6 
Tobacco/cigarettes 68.0 
Cannabis 60.8 
Ecstasy (E,MDMA) 
21.0 
Amphetamines (meth,P,pure) 
15.9 
Nitrous oxide 
14.4 
LSD 10.0 
Hallucinogenic mushrooms 
9.1 
Cocaine 6.2 
Kava 5.1 
Ice (crystal meth) 
3.5 
Tranquillizers 
(downers,valium,serepans) 
3.0 
Morphine 2.1 
GHB (gamma-hydroxybutyrate) 
1.7 
Poppies (opium) 
1.5 
Rush (Amyl nitrate,Butyl nitrate)' 
1.5 
Crack cocaine 
1.4 
Solvents (glue,petrol,spray paint) 
1.2 
Other hallucinogens (PCP,datura) 
1.2 
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Legal party pill users generally had much higher levels of illicit drug use than the 
wider population. This can be illustrated by comparing the illicit drug use of the legal 
party pill users with that of the general population from the recent 2003 Health 
Behaviours Survey – Drugs (2003 HBS-Drugs). The 2003 HBS-Drugs found among 
the general population aged 13-45 years old 19.7% had used cannabis, 3.7% had used 
amphetamine, 2.7%, had used ecstasy (MDMA) and 1.8% had used LSD in the 
previous year. 
 
 
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CHAPTER 3 – HARMS FROM LEGAL PARTY PILLS 
 
 
Introduction  
A central concern around legal party pills is the extent to which users are harmed by 
the use of these substances. This chapter presents findings on the extent to which 
users report that their use of legal party pills has harmed different areas of their lives 
and the types of physical and psychological problems experienced from legal party 
pill use. The final section of this chapter investigates the extent to which legal party 
pill users have accessed a range of health services in regard to their legal party pill 
use. 
 
Self-reported harms from legal party pills 
Those who had used legal party pills in the last year were asked whether their use of 
legal party pills had harmed eight areas of their life in the preceding year. The areas of 
life most commonly reported harmed were ‘energy and vitality’, ‘health’ and 
‘financial position’ (Table 3.1). Only 1% (n=2) of last year legal party pill users 
reported that their legal party pill use had harmed their ‘children’s health or well-
being’. 
 
Table 3.1: Self reported harmful effects from the use of legal party pills in the last 12 
months, 2006 
 
Area of life 
Percent (%)
Lower CI (%)
Upper CI (%) 
Energy and vitality 
19.3 
14.8
24.8 
Health 14.6 
10.6
19.9 
Financial position 
8.8 
5.7
13.4 
Outlook on life 
6.3 
3.8
10.3 
Home life 
4.7 
2.6
8.1 
Friendships and social life 
4.0 
2.0
7.9 
Work and study life 
2.9 
1.3
6.2 
 
 
Those who had experienced harm to ‘friendship and social life’, ‘work and study’ and 
‘financial’ areas of life from their legal party pill use were asked more detailed 
questions about the most serious problem they had suffered. The low numbers of 
respondents answering these questions indicate caution should be exercised when 
interpreting the results.  
 
Among those experiencing harm to ‘friendships and social life’ (4.0%, n=10) from 
their legal party pill use, four said the most serious problem was ‘arguments’, three 
said ‘mistrust or anxiety’ and two said ‘ending a relationship’. One said the most 
serious problem was being ‘kicked out of home’. 
 
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Among those who had experienced financial problems (8.8%, n=18) from their legal 
party pill use, 11 said they had ‘no money for recreation or luxury items’, two were 
‘in debt or owing money’, and three had ‘no money for food or rent’. 
 
Among those who had experienced work/study problems (2.9%, n=10) from their 
legal party pill use, six had ‘trouble concentrating’, two reported being ‘unmotivated’ 
and a further two taking ‘sick leave or not attending classes. 
 
Physical problems from legal party pill use 
Those who had used legal party pills in the last year were asked whether they had 
experienced any of a list of twenty-three physical problems from using legal party 
pills in the last year. Four out of 10 (41.1%; 35.0-47.4) legal party pill users had 
experienced ‘poor appetite’ (Table 3.2). Other physical problems commonly 
experienced from legal party pill use were ‘hot/cold flushes’, ‘heavy sweating’, 
‘stomach pains/nausea’, ‘headaches’ and ‘tremors and shakes’. A small number of last 
year legal party pill users reported ‘fainting/passing out’ (1.6%, n=4) or ‘fits/seizures’ 
(0.3%, n=1) related to their use of legal party pills. 
 
 
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Table 3.2: Self-reported physical problems from legal party pill use, 2006 
 
Problem  
Experienced (%) 
Lower CI (%)  Upper CI (%) 
Poor appetite 
41.1
35.0
47.4 
Hot/cold flushes 
30.6
25.0
36.9 
Heavy sweating 
23.4
18.4
29.3 
Stomach pains/nausea 
22.2
17.4
28.0 
Headaches 21.9
17.2
27.4 
Tremors/shakes 18.4
14.0
23.8 
Poor concentration 
18.2
13.9
23.6 
Dizziness 15.4
11.3
20.7 
Heart flutters 
15.4
11.3
20.5 
Weight loss 
13.7
9.9
18.7 
Teeth problems 
12.5
8.8
17.4 
Vomiting 12.2
8.5
17.4 
Shortness of breath 
11.3
7.7
16.2 
Numbness/ tingling 
10.7
7.4
15.3 
Inability to urinate 
9.7
6.5
14.4 
Memory lapse 
9.1
6.1
13.4 
Muscular aches 
8.5
5.6
12.7 
Blurred vision 
6.2
3.7
10.1 
Joint pains/stiffness 
5.6
3.4
9.1 
Skin problems 
3.9
2.1
7.0 
Chest pains 
3.8
2.2
6.7 
 
 
Psychological problems from legal party pill use 
Those who had used legal party pills in the last year were asked whether they had 
experienced any of a list of eighteen psychological problems from using legal party 
pills in the last year. Half (50.4%; 44.1-56.7) of the legal party pill users had 
experienced ‘trouble sleeping’ and one in five (18.4%; 14.0-23.7) experienced ‘loss of 
energy’ from their legal party pill use (Table 3.3). One in nine legal party pill users 
experienced ‘short temper’ (10.9%; 7.4-15.7) and about the same proportion reported 
‘irritability’ (11.4%, 8.1-15.8) associated with their legal party pill use. 
Approximately one in 12 (8.2%; 5.3-12.4) legal party pill users experienced 
‘depression’ and a further one in 12 (8.4%; 5.5-12.6) ‘paranoia’. A small number of 
users (1.2%, n=6) reported ‘feelings of aggression’ related to their use of legal party 
pills. A few legal party pill users indicated they had experienced ‘suicidal thoughts’ 
from their legal party pill use (0.8%, n=2). No legal party pill users said they had 
‘attempted suicide’ in relation to their legal party pill use. 
 
 
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Table 3.3: Self-reported psychological problems from legal party pill use, 2006 
 
Problem  
Experienced (%)   Lower CI (%)  Upper CI (%) 
Trouble sleeping 
50.4
44.1
56.7 
Loss of energy 
18.4
14.0
23.7 
Strange thoughts 
15.6
11.6
20.8 
Mood swings 
14.8
10.9
19.9 
Confusion 12.1
8.6
16.6 
Irritability 11.4
8.1
15.8 
Short temper 
10.9
7.4
15.7 
Anxiety 10.0
6.7
14.6 
Loss of sex urge 
9.5
6.3
14.1 
Visual hallucinations 
8.8
5.6
13.4 
Paranoia 8.4
5.5
12.6 
Depression 8.2
5.3
12.4 
Sound hallucinations 
6.9
4.3
10.8 
Flashbacks 5.0
2.9
8.4 
Panic attacks 
3.2
1.6
6.1 
 
 
Accessing health services 
Last year legal party pill users were asked if they had accessed a range of health 
services in the last 12 months in relation to their legal party pill use. One in 83 (1.2%) 
users had required an ambulance, a further one in 83 (1.2%) had visited a doctor, one 
in 100 (1.0%) users had visited a hospital emergency department and one in 250 
(0.4%) users had been admitted to a hospital in relation to their legal party pill use in 
the previous 12 months (Table 3.4). No users reported seeing a psychologist or 
psychiatrist in relation to their legal party pill use in the previous year. 
 
Table 3.4: Health services accessed in relation to legal party pill use in the previous 
year, 2006 
 
Medical service accessed 
Percent (%)
Ambulance 1.2
GP/Doctor 1.2
Accident and emergency 
1.0
Counsellor/drug and alcohol worker/social 
0.7
Hospital (been admitted) 
0.4
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

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CHAPTER 4 - AVAILABILITY, POTENCY AND PRICE OF 
LEGAL PARTY PILLS 
 
 
Introduction  
Environmental factors such as availability and price have been found to be important 
influences on drug use and drug related harm. This chapter investigates current and 
recent changes in levels of availability, potency and price of legal party pills. 
 
Availability of legal party pills 
Those who had used legal party pills in the last year were asked how easy it was to get 
legal party pills at the moment. Three quarters (75.7%; 69.8-80.8) of users described 
the current availability of legal party pills as ‘very easy’ and a further one in five 
(21.0%; 16.3-26.6) described availability as ‘easy’ (Figure 4.1). 
 
Figure 4.1: Current availability of legal party pills, 2006 
 
Percentage 
100
90
80
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
Very easy
Easy
Difficult
Very difficult
Availability
 
 
 
Last year legal party pill users were then asked how the availability of legal party pills 
had changed in the previous 12 months. One half (49.7%; 43.0-56.4) of users said the 
availability of legal party pills was ‘the same’ compared to 12 months ago (Figure 
4.2). However, over four out of 10 (45.1%; 38.6-51.8) users described the availability 
of legal party pills as getting ‘easier’ compared to a year ago. Only one in 20 (5.2%; 
2.9-9.3) users thought the availability of legal party pills had got ‘harder’ in the last 12 
months. 
 
 
 
 
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Figure 4.2: Change in the availability of legal party pills in the last 12 months, 2006 
 
Percentage 
100
90
80
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
Easier
Harder
Same
Availability
 
 
 
Strength of legal party pills 
Those who had used legal party pills in the last year were asked how the strength of 
legal party pills had changed in the previous 12 months. Half of the users (49.8%; 
42.2-57.5) said the strength of legal party pills was ‘higher’ compared to a year ago 
(Figure 4.3). A similar proportion (46.0%; 38.4-53.7) said the strength of legal party 
pills was ‘the same’ compared to 12 months ago. Only one in 24 (4.3%; 2.1-8.4) users 
thought the strength of legal party pills was ‘lower’ compared to a year ago. 
 
Figure 4.3: Change in the strength of legal party pills in the last 12 months, 2006 
 
Percentage 
100
90
80
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
Higher
Low er
Same
Strength
 
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Prices and purchase of legal party pills 
Nearly three quarters (73.3%) of those who had used legal party pills in the last year 
had purchased legal party pills in the previous year. The median dollar amount spent 
on legal party pills per user on a typical occasion was $40 (mean $39, range $8-$200).  
 
Those who had purchased legal party pills in the previous year were asked how the 
price of legal party pills had changed compared to 12 months ago. Half (54.7%; 46.3-
62.9) of those who had purchased legal party pills in the last year said the price of 
legal party pills had remained ‘the same’ compared to a year ago (Figure 4.4). A 
quarter (26.8%; 19.8-35.2) of legal party pill buyers said the price of legal party pills 
was ‘higher’ compared to a year ago and one in five (18.5%; 13.0-25.5) reported the 
price was ‘lower’. 
 
Figure 4.4: Change in the price of legal party pills in the last 12 months, 2006 
 
Percentage 
100
90
80
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
Higher
Low er
Same
Price
 
 
 
Those who had purchased legal party pills in the last year were asked how long it 
would take them to buy some legal party pills. Two thirds (66.9%; 60.8-72.6) of legal 
party pill buyers answered ‘less than 20 minutes’ and a further one in six (15.9%; 
11.9-21.0) said it would take them about 1 hour (Table 4.1). 
 
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Table 4.1: Time taken to purchase legal party pills, 2006 
 
Percentage 
100
90
80
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
Months
Weeks
Days
About 1
Hours
1 hour
Less than
Wouldn't
day
20
know
minutes
w here to
buy some
Tim e
 
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CHAPTER 5 – EXTENT OF DEPENDENCY ON LEGAL PARTY 
PILLS 
 
 

Introduction 
The potential for a drug to create dependency among users is often considered a 
central issue with respect to evaluating its harm. Dependency is, however, difficult to 
both define and measure. In the absence of specific measures of dependency for legal 
party pills, the approach taken here is to use a Short Dependency Scale (SDS) which 
has been validated for amphetamine dependency (Gossop et al., 1995). A cut-off score 
of greater than four for the combined five questions of the SDS has been validated as 
indicative of problematic amphetamine use (Topp and Mattick, 1997). This chapter 
also presents findings on the extent to which legal party pill users thought they 
required help to reduce their level of legal party pill use. 
 
Extent of dependency 
One in 45 (2.2%) of last year legal party pill users were classified as dependent on 
legal party pills by scoring greater than four on the combined five questions of the 
SDS (Figure 5.1). One in 21 (4.8%) legal party pill users scored four or more on the 
SDS scale. Nearly three quarters (73.7%) of legal party pill users had a combined 
score of zero on the SDS scale. Nine out of 10 (91.7%) users had a combined score of 
two or less.  
 
Figure 5.1: Short Dependency Scale scores of last year legal party pill users 
(dependency validated for those who score greater than 4), 2006 
 
Percentage 100
90
80
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10 11 12 13 14 15
Dependency score
Dependency score
Cumulative Dependency score
 
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The results for each of the five questions which make up the SDS are presented 
below. A ‘never’ or ‘not difficult’ response received a score of zero for the purposes 
of the SDS. The other three options for each question received scores of 1, 2 or 3 
respectively. 
 
Extent that use is out of control 
Those who had used legal party pills in the last year were first asked whether they 
ever thought their use of legal party pills was out of control. Nearly nine out of 10 
(88.2%; 83.4-91.8) users answered that they ‘never’ felt their legal party pill use was 
out of control (Figure 5.2). One in 10 (9.7%; 6.5-14.2) said they ‘sometimes’ felt their 
legal party pill use was out of control. 
 
 
Figure 5.2: Extent use of legal party pills was considered out of control, 2006 
 
Percentage 
100
90
80
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
Never
Sometimes
Often
Alw ays
 
 
 

Concern about missing a dose 
Last year legal party pill users were asked if the prospect of missing a dose of legal 
party pills made them feel anxious or worried. Over nine out of 10 (96.8%; 93.4-98.5) 
legal party pill users said ‘never’ (Figure 5.3). 
 
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Figure 5.3: Prospect of missing a dose made you feel anxious or worried, 2006 
 
 
Percentage 
100
90
80
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
Never
Sometimes
Often
Alw ays
 
 
 
Worry about legal party pill use 
Last year legal party pill users were asked if they had worried about their legal party 
pill use. Nearly nine out of 10 (86.2%; 80.8-90.2) replied ‘never’. One in nine (10.7%; 
7.2-15.6) users answered they ‘sometimes’ worried about their legal party pill use 
(Figure 5.4). 
 
Figure 5.4: Worry about your legal party pill use, 2006 
 
Percentage 
100
90
80
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
Never
Sometimes
Often
Alw ays
 
 
 
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Wish you could stop 
Last year legal party pill users were asked if they wished they could stop their legal 
party pill use. Nearly nine out of 10 (85.5%; 80.0-89.8) said they had never wished 
they could stop (Figure 5.5). 
 
Figure 5.5: Wish you could stop using legal party pills, 2006 
 
Percentage 
100
90
80
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
Never
Sometimes
Often
Alw ays
 
 
 
Difficulty stopping 
Finally, last year legal party pill users were asked how difficult they would find it to 
stop or go without legal party pills. Nearly all legal party pill users (97.9%; 94.8-99.2) 
said it would not be difficult to stop using legal party pills (Figure 5.6). 
 
Figure 5.6: How difficult you find it to stop using legal party pills, 2006 
 
Percentage 
100
90
80
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
Not difficult
Quite difficult
Very difficult
Impossible
 
 
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Extent required help to reduce level of use 
Those who had used legal party pills in the last year were asked to what extent they 
felt they needed help to reduce their level of legal party pill use. Nearly all users 
(97.4%; 94.5-98.8) answered they thought they needed ‘no help at all’ (Figure 5.7). 
 
Figure 5.7: Extent last year users felt they needed help to reduce legal party pill use, 
2006 
 
Percentage 
100
90
80
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
A lot of help
Some help
A little help
No help at all
 
 
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CHAPTER 6 – ‘GATEWAY’ EFFECTS AND LEGAL PARTY 
PILLS 
 
Introduction 
An important concern often raised about legal party pills is that the easy access to 
these legal stimulants may increase young people’s propensity to try other more 
powerful illicit stimulants, such as methamphetamine and ecstasy, or other illicit drug 
types in general. The manufacturers of legal party pills, on the other hand, claim that 
legal party pills provide safer alternatives to more harmful illicit substances, both for 
those who are currently abusing more powerful illicit substances and young people 
who may otherwise try illicit drugs. A third scenario is that legal party pills are simply 
used in combination with illicit drugs and have little impact on overall illicit drug use. 
The data presented in this chapter seeks to inform our understanding of the role legal 
party pills are playing in illicit drug use by directly asking respondents who have used 
both legal party pills and illicit drugs to describe how their use of the two groups of 
substances is interrelated. More sophisticated multivariate analysis of the impact of 
legal party pills on a range of measures of illicit drug use and drug related harm are 
planned to supplement this general report. 
 
Current relationship between legal party pills and illicit drug use 
Those who had used legal party pills and an illicit drug in the previous year were 
asked how their use of legal party pills fits into their current illicit drug use. 
Respondents were read out a number of statements describing how their current use of 
legal party pills interrelates with their current illicit drug use and asked to select the 
one that best describes their experience. One third of the respondents to the question 
(33.2; 26.0-41.2) indicated that they had recently ‘stopped their illicit drug use’. Of 
those who were current illicit drug users, approximately three out of 10 (27.9%; 19.9-
37.8) indicated that they only ‘use legal party pills when they cannot get illicit drugs’ 
(Figure 6.1). A further three out of 10 (26.9%; 18.8-36.9) indicated that they ‘use 
legal party pills with illegal drugs to enhance their effects or duration of their effects’. 
Over four out of 10 (45.2%; 35.6-55.1) reported that they ‘use legal party pills so they 
do not have to use illegal drugs’. 
 
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Figure 6.1: Role legal party pills play in current illicit drug use, 2006 
 
Percentage 
100
90
80
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
Use only w hen can't get
Use so don't have to use
Use w ith illegal drugs
il egal drugs
illegal drugs
Use of BZP
 
 
Past relationship between legal party pills and illicit drug use 
Those who had tried both legal party pills and an illicit drug in their lifetime were 
asked how their use of legal party pills fitted into their history of illicit drug use. 
Respondents were read out a number of statements describing the past relationship 
between their legal party pill and illicit drug use and asked to select the one that best 
fitted their experience. One half of the respondents to the question (49.7; 43.6-55.9) 
indicated that they had ‘stopped both legal party pill and illicit drug use’ and there 
was no relationship between the two. Of those who indicated some kind of past 
relationship between their legal party pill and illicit drug use, one in seven (13.5%; 
8.4-20.8) indicated they had ‘started out using legal party pills but now mostly use 
illegal drugs’ (Figure 6.2). Four out of 10 (42.5%; 34.1-51.4) reported they ‘now use 
both illegal drugs and legal party pills (no change in level of illegal drug use)’. The 
final group (44.1%; 35.5-53.0) indicated they ‘were using illicit drugs but now mostly 
use legal party pills’.  
 
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Figure 6.2: Role legal party pills have played in history of illicit drug use, 2006 
 
Percentage 
100
90
80
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
Started out using legal party
Was using other il egal drugs
Now  use both il egal drugs
pil s but now  mostly use
but now  mostly use legal
and legal party pil s
other il egal drugs
party pills
  
 
 
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CHAPTER 7 – USER PERCEPTIONS OF LEGAL PARTY PILLS 
 
 
Introduction 
Perceptions of the benefits and risks of using legal party pills contributes to our 
understanding of why some people choose to use these substances, the ways they use 
them, and the problems they may experience. This chapter presents findings on the 
characteristics of legal party pills which users reported they most liked and most 
disliked, users’ knowledge of the product safety instructions of legal party pills, and 
users’ perceptions of the health risk of legal party pills and other drug types. 
 
Characteristics of legal party pills most liked 
Those who had used legal party pills in the previous year were asked the three things 
they most liked about legal party pills. Approximately half of users (53.2%; 46.3-
60.0) said they most liked the ‘energy’ that legal party pills provided (Table 7.1). 
Over four out of 10 (45.1%; 38.3-52.0) users said the euphoric effects of legal party 
pills was the characteristic they most liked. Other attributes of legal party pills which 
users commonly reported as characteristics they most liked included that they were 
‘legal’ (22.5%; 17.4-28.5), inexpensive (21.2%; 16.1-27.4), ‘easy to buy’ (19.9%; 
15.0-26.0), ‘enhanced ability to socialise’ (7.8%; 5.0-12.1), were perceived to be 
‘safer than illegal drugs’ (6.7%; 4.0-11.0) and ‘increased confidence’ (4.9%; 2.7-8.8). 
 
Table 7.1: Characteristics of legal party pills which users most liked, 2006 
 
Attribute Percent 
(%) 
Energy/keeps you going all night 
53.2
The ‘high’/effects/ euphoria 
45.1
They’re legal 
22.5
They’re cheap 
21.2
They’re easy to buy 
19.9
Enhance ability to socialise 
7.8
Better/safer than illegal 
drugs/alternative substance 
6.7
Increase confidence 
4.9
Calm me down/relaxing effect 
2.7
You can drink more alcohol 
2.2
The new names 
1.8
Hallucinations 1.6
Allows you to work longer 
1.3
Helps me think/reflect 
1.1
Makes sex better 
0.8
Packaging/adverts 0.8
Make other illegal drugs 
better/last longer 
0.6
Makes music better 
0.5
(Percentages are of those who had used legal party pills in the last year excluding don’t know  
and refused; n=252) 
 
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Characteristics of legal party pills most disliked 
Those who had used legal party pills in the previous year were asked the three things 
they most disliked about legal party pills. Approximately half (50.9%; 44.1-57.6) of 
users mentioned the ‘hang over’ associated with using legal party pills as the 
characteristic they most disliked (Table 7.2). About one in five users said the 
‘inability to sleep’ (19.5%; 14.6-25.4) and ‘cost’ (17.6%; 12.8-23.7) were aspects of 
legal party pills they most did not like. Other features of legal party pills which users 
said they most disliked were ‘dehydration and sweating’ (11.5%; 7.8-16.6), ‘feeling 
sick’ (11.0%; 7.6-15.7), that ‘kids’ (5.5%; 3.2-9.2) were using them, ‘exhaustion’ 
(5.2%; 3.0-8.9%) and ‘jaw cramps’ (4.6%; 2.4-8.3). 
 
Table 7.2: Characteristics of legal party pills which users most disliked, 2006 
 
Attribute Percent 
(%) 
Come down/hang over 
50.9
Inability to sleep 
19.5
Cost/price 17.6
Dehydration and sweating 
11.5
Feeling sick 
11.0
Kids using them 
5.5
Exhaustion 5.2
Jaw cramps 
4.6
Knowing its bad for you 
3.1
Too little information/instruction 
3.1
Taste 2.8
Disappointing high 
2.5
Long terms effects 
2.4
Social stigma 
1.7
Anxiety 1.7
Drink too much alcohol 
1.7
Money wasted 
1.6
Paranoia 1.6
Loss of sex urge 
1.4
Depression 1.1
Loss of friends 
0.6
Makes me sneaky and lie 
0.5
Fits 0.5
Addiction/cravings 0.3
Makes me angry 
0.2
(Percentages are of those who had used legal party pills in the last year excluding don’t know  
and refused; n=256) 
 
Knowledge of the safe number of legal party pills to take 
Those who had used legal party pills in the previous year were asked what was the 
safe number of legal party pills someone could take in a single night. Manufacturers’ 
product instructions commonly advise that only two pills should be taken in a single 
night, and first time users should be cautious and only start with one pill. One in six 
(15.5%; 11.5-20.6) users indicated they did not know how many legal party pills it 
was safe to take in one night. Of those who thought they knew how many legal pills it 
was safe to take in a night, four out of 10 (40.7%) answered more than two pills, with 
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15.3% saying three pills, 15.7% four pills and 9.9% saying five pills or more (Figure 
7.1). 
 
Figure 7.1: Users’ perceptions of how many legal party pills can be safely taken in 
one night, 2006 
 
Percentage 
50
45
40
35
30
25
20
15
10
5
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7+
Num ber of pills
 
 
 
Knowledge of what substances should not be taken with legal party pills 
Those who had used legal party pills in the last 12 months were asked what 
substances should not be taken with legal party pills. Manufacturers’ product 
instructions commonly advise that legal party pills should not be taken with alcohol, 
other drugs, medicines or other BZP products. One in five (21.2%; 16.4-26.8) users 
did not know what other substances should not be taken with legal party pills. Of 
those who provided an answer, seven out of 10 (69.3%; 62.3-75.5) said ‘drugs’ and 
six out of 10 (64.2%; 57.1-70.8) said ‘alcohol’ (Table 7.3). A small number of 
respondents wrongly answered ‘food’ (3.2%, n=2) and ‘water’ (1.2%, n=1) should not 
be taken with legal party pills. 
 
Table 7.3: Users’ perceptions of what substances should not be taken with legal party 
pills, 2006 
 
Substance 
Percent (%) 
Lower CI (%)
Upper CI (%) 
Drugs 69.3
62.3
75.5 
Alcohol 64.2
57.1
70.8 
Medicines 15.3
11.0
20.7 
Other BZP products 
6.7
3.9
11.1 
 
 
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Types of people who should not use legal party pills 
Last year legal party pill users were asked which groups of people should not take 
legal party pills. Manufacturers’ product instructions commonly advise that pregnant 
or breast feeding mothers, people with medical conditions and those with a mental 
illness should not take legal party pills. One in 10 (9.5%; 6.2-14.5) users did not know 
which groups of people should not use legal party pills (Table 7.4). Approximately 
four out of 10 of those who thought they knew which groups of people should not use 
legal party pills said ‘children under 16 years old’, ‘people with medical conditions’ 
and ‘people with mental illnesses’ should not use legal party pills. Nearly three out of 
10 (28.8%; 23.2-35.2) said ‘pregnant or breast feeding mothers’. A small number of 
respondents (1.5%, n=5) said ‘people with aggressive tendencies’ should not take 
legal party pills. 
 
Table 7.4: Users’ perceptions of which groups of people should not use legal party 
pills, 2006 
 
Type Percent 
Lower CI (%)  Upper CI (%)
(%) 
Children under 16 years old 
44.4
37.9 
51.1
People with medical conditions 
43.3
36.9 
50.0
People with mental illness 
41.0
34.6 
47.6
Under 18 years/adolescents 
33.7
27.7 
40.4
Pregnant or breast feeding women 
28.8
23.2 
35.2
People who have substance misuse problems 
7.6
4.7 
11.9
Elderly people 
3.1
1.6 
6.0
 
 
Perceptions of the health risk of using different drug types 
All respondents to the survey were asked to rate the harm to health of using eight 
separate drug types, including alcohol and cigarettes, and illegal drugs such as 
amphetamines. Respondents were asked to rate the health risk of regularly using each 
of these substances on a five point scale ranging from no risk=1 to extreme risk=5. 
The full table results for this question can be found in Appendix 2.  
 
Figure 7.2 presents the proportion of last year legal party pill users who thought the 
regular use of a substance was an ‘extreme health risk’ for the eight different 
substances. Nearly three-quarters (74.6%; 68.5-79.9) of legal party pill users thought 
the regular use of methamphetamine was an ‘extreme health risk’. Over six out of 10 
(63.8%; 56.4-70.7) legal party pill users considered the regular use of GHB to be an 
‘extreme health risk’. Approximately half of legal party pill users considered the 
regular use of LSD to be an ‘extreme health risk’. Legal party pill users considered 
the risk of regularly using alcohol, cannabis and legal party pills to be broadly on the 
same par with each other with less than 10% of legal party pill users considering the 
regular use of these substances to be an ‘extreme health risk’. 
 
 
 
 
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Figure 7.2: Proportion of last year legal party pill users who considered the regular 
use of a substance to an ‘extreme health risk’, 2006 
 
P e rcentage 
100
90
80
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
M ethamphetamine
GHB
LSD
Ecstasy
Tobacco
Alcohol
Cannabis
Legal Party Pills
D rug
 
 
 
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CHAPTER 8 – POLICY AND LEGAL PARTY PILLS 
 
 

Introduction 
The sale of legal party pills is currently restricted to those 18 years or older, and the 
advertising of legal party pills is prohibited in major media sources such as television, 
radio, newspapers and magazines. These regulatory controls of legal party pills were 
introduced in June 2005. This chapter provides data on how these regulations are 
impacting on young people’s ability to purchase legal party pills, and how the general 
public would like to see the regulation of legal party pills evolve in the near future. 
 
Age identification 
All those who had purchased legal party pills in the last year and who were under the 
age of 20 (i.e. n=49) were asked on how many occasions, when they had tried to 
purchase legal party pills, had the seller asked them for age identification. Although 
the age limit to purchase legal party pills is currently set at 18 years old and over, it is 
standard practice to ask for age identification from those who look well above the 
legal age of purchase to ensure that all those who may be under age are scrutinised. 
For example, supermarkets request age identification for the purchase of alcohol from 
all customers who look as old as 25. 
 
Approximately three out of 10 (26.7%; 15.8-41.3) legal party pill buyers under 20 
years old had ‘never’ been asked for age identification when attempting to purchase 
legal party pills (Figure 8.1). Over half of legal party pill users under 20 years old had 
been asked for age identification only ‘sometimes’ or less often. However, one-third 
(34.8%; 21.4-51.2) of legal party pill buyers said they were asked for age 
identification ‘all the time’. 
 
Figure 8.1 Frequency of sellers request for age identification from those who 
purchased legal party pills and were under 20 years old, 2006 
 
Percentage 
50
45
40
35
30
25
20
15
10
5
0
Never
Hardly any
Sometimes
Most of the time
Al  the time
 
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The low sample numbers of legal party pill buyers who were under 18 years of age 
(i.e. n=17) made examining requests for age identification among the under 18 age 
group problematic. The small number of legal party pill users in this age group 
indicates that caution should be exercised with the findings from this question for this 
age group. Among legal party pill buyers under 18 years old, four out of 10 (44.7%, 
n=9) said they had ‘never’ been asked for age identification when attempting to 
purchase legal party pills. Seven out of 10 (72.3%) legal party pill users under 18 
years old had been asked for age identification only ‘sometimes’ or less often when 
trying to purchase legal party pills. Three out of 10 (27.7%, n=3) had been asked for 
age identification ‘all the time’. 
 
Refused purchase 
All those who had purchased legal party pills in the last year and were under the age 
of 20 (i.e. n=49) were asked on how many occasions when they had tried to purchase 
legal party pills did the seller refuse to sell them legal party pills because they thought 
they were underage or because they did not have adequate age identification. Figure 
8.2 shows that eight out of 10 (80.7%; 65.4-90.3) legal party pill buyers under the age 
of 20 had ‘never’ been refused purchase of legal party pills.  
 
Figure 8.2 Frequency with which legal party pill buyers under 20 years old had been 
refused sales of legal party pills, 2006 
 
Percentage 
100
90
80
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
Never
Hardly any
Sometimes
Most of the time
Al  the time
 
 
Low sample numbers of legal party pill buyers who were under 18 years of age (i.e. 
n=17) made examining purchase refusals among the under 18 age group problematic. 
The small number of legal party pill users in this age group indicates that caution 
should be exercised with the findings from this question for this age group. Among 
legal party pill buyers under 18 years old, seven out of 10 (68.1%, n=12) said they 
had never been refused the purchase of legal party pills. Eight out of 10 (80.9%, 
n=14) legal party pill users under 18 years old had been refused the purchase of legal 
party pills only ‘sometimes’ or less often. One in five (19.2%, n=3) legal party pill 
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users under 18 years old had been refused the purchase of legal party pills ‘all the 
time’. 
 
Perceptions of the current regulation of legal party pills 
All respondents to the survey were asked whether the current regulation of legal party 
pills was ‘too heavy’, ‘about right’ or ‘too light’. As an introduction to the question, 
the interviewer explained to the respondent that the sale and supply of legal party pills 
in New Zealand is currently restricted to people aged 18 years and over, and the 
advertising of legal party pills is prohibited in major media sources such as television, 
radio, newspapers and magazines. The interviewer explained further that there are 
currently no restrictions on whom may sell legal party pills and legal party pills can be 
purchased at a range of retail sales outlets. 
 
Six out of 10 (60.6%; 58.2-63.1) survey respondents felt that the current regulation of 
legal party pills was ‘too light’ (Figure 8.3). One third (36.2%; 33.9-38.7) of 
respondents said current regulation was ‘about right’. One in 32 (3.1%; 2.3-4.2) 
respondents believed that the current regulation of legal party pills was ‘too heavy’. 
 
Figure 8.3: Perceptions concerning the current regulation of legal party pills, 2006 
 
Percentage 
100
90
80
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
Too heavy
About right
Too light
 
 
 
Areas of regulation of legal party pills like to see strengthened 
Those survey respondents who indicated they thought the current regulation of legal 
party pills was ‘too light’ (60.6%; n=1187) were asked what areas of legal party pill 
regulation they would like to see strengthened and were read out thirteen possible 
options to strengthen existing regulation. Respondents could indicate support for more 
than one regulatory option and were invited to provide any additional option they 
supported which was not on the set list. Six out of 10 (59.0%; 55.8-62.1) respondents 
wanted to see the sale of legal party pills ‘prohibited from convenience stores’ (Table 
8.1). About half (51.3%; 48.2-54.4) of respondents wanted sellers of legal party pills 
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to have to obtain a special license to sell these products. A further half of respondents 
wanted ‘mandatory health warnings on all packaging’ and ‘age restrictions on 
purchasing to be increased to 20 years old’. A similar proportion (45.0%; 41.9-48.2) 
wanted legal party pills to be ‘prohibited for everyone’. Approximately one-third of 
respondents indicated support for ‘a total ban on advertising’, ‘prohibition from places 
that sold alcohol’ and ‘restricting the total dosage of BZP sold in a single pack’. Small 
numbers of respondents supported ‘greater identification checks’ (0.4%, n=5) and 
‘more education’ (0.4%; n=6) 
 
Table 8.1: Areas of the regulation of legal party pills like to see strengthened, 2006 
 
Regulation 
Percent (%) 
Lower CI (%)
Upper CI (%) 
Prohibit sales from convenience 
stores 
59.0
55.8
62.1 
Sellers must obtain a special licence 
to sell BZP 
51.3
48.2
54.4 
Mandatory health warnings on all 
packaging 46.3
43.2
49.4 
Higher age restriction on purchase to 
20 years old 
45.9
42.8
49.1 
Outright prohibition/made illegal for 
everyone 45.0
41.9
48.2 
A total ban on advertising 
 38.0
35.0
41.0 
Prohibit sales from places that sell 
alcohol 
33.4
30.6
36.4 
Restrict the total dosage of BZP sold 
in a single pack 
32.6
29.8
35.6 
Tax BZP products to raise the price 
 
32.2
29.4
35.2 
Restrict the dosage of BZP per pill 
 31.8
29.0
34.8 
More product information available 
 1.3
0.8
2.1 
(Percentages are of respondents who thought the regulation of legal party pills was ‘too light’ excluding don’t know  
and refused; n=1187) 
 
 
Areas of regulation of legal party pills like to see relaxed 
Those survey respondents who believed the current regulation of legal party pills was 
‘too heavy’ (3.1%, n=41) were asked what regulations they would like to see relaxed 
and were read three options to relax existing regulations. Respondents could indicate 
support for more than one regulatory option and were invited to provide any 
additional option they supported, which was not on the list. Approximately half 
(51.3%; 34.6-67.7) of respondents wanted the legal age required to purchase party 
pills to be lowered to 16 years old (Table 8.2). A similar proportion of respondents 
wanted the advertising of legal party pills to be permitted in major media networks. 
About three out of 10 (26.5%; 14.1-44.2) respondents wanted there to be no age 
restrictions on the purchase of legal party pills. 
 
 
 
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Table 8.2: Areas of the regulation of legal party pills like to see relaxed, 2006 
 
Regulation 
Percent (%)
Lower CI (%)
Upper CI (%) 
Lowering of the age restrictions on 
purchase to 16 years old 
53.0
36.2
69.2 
Advertising allowed in major media 
networks 
47.9
31.5
64.7 
No age restrictions on purchase 
 26.5
14.1
44.2 
(Percentages are of respondents who thought the regulation of legal party pills was ‘too heavy’ excluding don’t 
know and refused; n=41) 
 
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CHAPTER 9 – DEMOGRAPHIC CHARACTERISTICS OF LEGAL 
PARTY PILL USERS 
 
 

Introduction 
A central concern with regard to legal party pills is that they are widely used by 
adolescents who are particularly vulnerable to the harms of drug use and to persuasion 
and influence by media advertising. This chapter presents the demographic 
characteristics of those respondents who reported using legal party pills in the 
previous 12 months and contrasts them with the wider population who had not used 
legal party pills in the last year. More sophisticated multivariate analysis of the 
demographic characteristics of legal party pill users is planned to supplement this 
general report. 
 
Age and gender 
Overall, six out of 10 (59.9%; 53.6-65.9) of those who had used legal party pills in the 
last year were male. While last year legal party pill users tended to be younger than 
the wider sample (mean age 24.1 years old vs. 29.3 years old, p<0.0001), about one in 
five (22.1%) last year legal party pill users were older than 29 years of age (Figure 
9.1). At the opposite end of the age scale, one in seven (15.1%) last year legal party 
pill users were under 18 years old. More last year legal party pill users than non-last 
year legal party pill users were aged 18-19 years old (15.1% vs. 5.3%, p<0.0001) and 
20-24 years old (35.1% vs. 10.3%, p<0.0001). 
 
Figure 9.1: Last year legal party pill users versus non-last year legal party pill users by 
age, 2006 
 
Percentage 
50
45
Last year BZP users
40
Non-last year users
35
30
25
20
15
10
5
0
13-14
15-17
18-19
20-24
25-29
30-34
35-39
40-45
Age 
 
 
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Ethnicity 
Nearly eight of 10 (76.2%; 70.3-81.3) of those who had used legal party pills in the 
previous 12 months were European. One in five (18.7%; 14.2-24.2) legal party pill 
users were Maori, one in 43 (2.4%; 1.0-5.5) were Asian and one in 56 (1.8%; 0.7-4.8) 
were Pacific Islanders (Figure 9.2). More last year legal party pill users than non-last 
year legal party pill users were Asian (8.5% vs. 2.4%, p=0.0175). There was no 
difference in the proportion of last year legal party pill users who were Maori versus 
the proportion of non-last year legal party pill users who were Maori (18.7% vs. 
13.5%, p=0.1632). 
 
Figure 9.2: Last year legal party pill users versus non-last year legal party pill users by 
ethnicity, 2006 
 
Percentage 
100
90
Last year BZP users
80
Non-last year users
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
European
Maori
Pacific Islander
Asian
Other
Ethnicity
 
 
 
Employment status 
Two-thirds (66.7%; 60.3-72.5) of last year legal party pill users were in paid 
employment (Figure 9.3). Nearly a quarter of legal party pill users were students, 
studying either at high school (8.9%; 5.8-13.3) or tertiary (14.8%; 10.6-20.2) 
institutions. One in 20 (5.0%; 3.0-8.2) of those who had used legal party pills in the 
last year reported their employment status as ‘parent or caregiver’. More last year 
legal party pill users than non-last year legal party pill users were tertiary students 
(14.8% vs. 8.1%, p=0.011). Less last year legal party pill users than non-last year 
legal party pill users were school students (8.9% vs. 18.8%, p=0.0024). 
 
 
 
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Figure 9.3: Last year legal party pill users versus non-last year legal party pill users by 
employment status, 2006 
 
Percentage 
100
90
Last year BZP users
Non-last year users
80
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
School
Tertiary
Working
Unemployed
Sick/invalid
Retired
Parenting/care
student
student
giving
Em ploym ent status
 
 
Income 
Figure 9.4 presents the gross annual personal income of the last year party pill users 
and non-last year legal party pill users. There was a wide range in incomes reported 
by legal party pill users with users represented in both the low income groups and 
middle to high income groups. 
 
Figure 9.4: Last year legal party pill users versus non-last year legal party pill users by 
gross annual personal income, 2006 
 
Percentage 
50
45
Last year BZP user
40
Non-last year user
35
30
25
20
15
10
5
0
Zero /Nil
$ 1-
$ 5001-
$ 10001-
$ 15001-
$ 20001-
$ 25001-
$ 30001-
$ 40001-
$ 50001-
$ 70001-
$ 100001
$ 5000
$ 10000
$ 15000
$ 20000
$ 25000
$ 30000
$ 40000
$ 50000
$ 70000 $ 100000 o r  mo re
Incom e
 
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Geographical location 
The geographical location of last year legal party pill users is presented in Figure 9.5. 
Appendix 3 details how the survey locations were allocated to the four regions. The 
Northern Region consists of the upper part of the North Island down to and including 
Counties-Manukau. The Southern Region includes all of the South Island. The Central 
Region includes the lower part of the North Island up to the border of the Waikato and 
around to the border of the Bay of Plenty (excluding Taupo). There was no difference 
in the regional location of last year legal party pill users compared to non-last year 
legal party pill users. 
 
Figure 9.5: Last year legal party pill users versus non-last year legal party pill users by 
region, 2006 
 
Percentage 
50
45
Last year BZP users
40
Non-last year users
35
30
25
20
15
10
5
0
Northern
Midland
Central
Southern
Area
 
 
 
 
 
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REFERENCES 
 
Black, S. and Casswell, S. (1993) Drugs in New Zealand: A Survey 1990. University 
of Auckland: Alcohol & Public Health Research Unit. 
Bye, C., Munro-Faure, A., Peck, A. and Young, P. (1973) A comparison of the effects 
of l-benzylpiperazine on human performance tests. European Journal of 
Clinical Pharmacology
 163-169.  
Campbell, H., Cline, W. and Evans, M., et al. (1973) Comparison of the effects of 
dexamethamphetamine and l-benzylpiperazine in former addicts. European 
Journal of Clinical Pharmacology
 170-176.  
Chapple, I. (2005) Shops trumpet R18 party pill ban - then ignore it. Sunday Star 
Times, 17 April. 
Expert Advisory Committee on Drugs (2004) The Expert Advisory Committee on 
Drugs (EACD) Advice to the Minister on: Benzylpiperazine (BZP). April. 
Wellington: EACD  
Field, A. and Casswell, S. (1999) Drugs in New Zealand: A National Survey 1998. 
University of Auckland: Alcohol and Public Health Research Unit. 
Gee, P., Richardson, S., Woltersdorf, W. and Moore, G. (2005) Toxic effects of BZP-
based herbal party pills in humans: a prospective study in Christchurch, New 
Zealand. New Zealand Medical Journal 118:1227, 1784-.  
Gossop, M., Darke, S., Griffiths, P., Hando, J., Powis, B., Hall, W. and Strang, J. 
(1995) The Severity of Dependence Scale (SDS): psychometric properties of 
the SDS in English and Australian samples of heroin, cocaine and 
amphetamine users. Addiction 90 607-614.  
Hayman, K. (2005) Party pills put four in hospital a week. The Press, 3 November. 
Janes, A. (2004) Party Pills. New Zealand Listener, 23-29 October. 
New Zealand Herald (2005a) Pill worry at big day out. 20 January. 
New Zealand Herald (2005b) Restraints on party pills delayed. 2 April. 
Saunders, A. (2005) Party pill user set room on fire. Dominion Post, 22 April. 
Topp, L. and Mattick, R. (1997) Choosing a cut-off on the Severity of Dependence 
Scale (SDS) for amphetamine users. Addiction 92:7, 839-845.  
Wilkins, C., Casswell, S., Bhatta, K. and Pledger, M. (2002) Drug Use in New 
Zealand: National Surveys Comparison 1998 & 2001. Auckland: Alcohol & 
Public Health Research Unit  
 
 
 
 

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Appendix 1 – Product types 
 
Table A1: Legal party pill products most often used by last year users, 2006 
 
Product name 
Percent (%)
Charge 26.6
Kandi 10.2
Red Hearts 
5.3
Grins 2 
5.0
Goodstuff 5.0
Jump 4.6
Bolts 4.1
Silver Bullet 
3.5
Legal X 
3.1
Frenzy 2.9
Euphoria 2.7
Rapture 2.1
Ice Diamonds 
2.0
Smileys 2.0
Dark Angel 
1.8
Jax 1.5
Jets 1.5
Mickey Finns 
1.3
Wizzs 1.3
Reloads 1.2
Twisted 1.2
Supersonic 1.2
Kongs 1.0
Scarfee S 
1.0
Bliss 0.8
Extacy 0.8
Bulldogs 0.5
ESP 0.5
Humma 0.5
Mystics 0.5
Red Devils 
0.5
Wizzers 0.5
Yum Yums 
0.5
Butterflies 0.4
Move 0.4
Pulse 0.4
Pure 0.4
Rave Gold 
0.4
Big Red 
0.2
Herbal Ecstasy 
0.2
Turbo Extreme 
0.2
 
 
 
 
 
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Appendix 2 – Perceptions of the health risk of different 
substances  
 
Table A2: Survey respondents’ (last year legal party pill users’) perceptions of the 
health risk of regularly using different drug types, 2006 
 
 
Legal  Alcohol Cigarettes
Cannabis
Meth- 
Ecstasy  GHB LSD 
party 
ampheta-
(MDMA) 
pills 
mine 
No risk 4.2 
4.8  
2.9  
3.5  
0.2  
1.0  
0.2  
0.4  
(%) 
(17.1)  (6.3) 
(7.4) 
(12.4) 
(0.3) 
(3.8) 
(0.2) 
(1.3) 
Slight 
18.0 
22.8 
9.9  
14.4 
0.7  
3.4  
2.2  
2.6  
risk (%) 
(30.4)  (23.5) 
(15.9) 
(31.0) 
(2.6) 
(8.6) 
(5.4) 
(7.7) 
Moderate  34.8 
42.3 
27.7  
34.5 
3.8  
12.2 
7.9  
8.5 
Risk (%) 
(32.9)  (38.7) 
(30.8) 
(33.2) 
(7.3) 
(19.8) 
(9.0) 
(11.1)
Great 
23.2 
17.9 
28.7  
25.8 
16.3 
30.1 
24.4 
31.0 
risk (%) 
(13.7)  (21.8) 
(19.4) 
(14.8) 
(15.1) 
(32.3) 
(21.6)  (29.9)
Extreme 
19.9 
12.3  
30.8  
21.8  
79.0 
53.4 
65.3 
57.5 
Risk (%) 
(5.9) 
(9.8) 
(26.6) 
(8.7) 
(74.6) 
(35.5) 
(63.8)  (50.1)
 
 
 
 

Centre for Social and Health Outcomes Research and Evaluation & Te Ropu Whariki 
61
Te Runanga, Wananga, Hauora me te Paekaka 

Appendix 3 – Locations 
 
Table A3: Survey locations assigned to four regions, 2006 
 
Location 
Area 
Frequency 
 
 
(unweighted)
Main - Auckland 
Northern 
587
Main - Hibiscus Coast 
Northern 
18
Main - Whangarei 
Northern 
29
NMU - Auckland 
Northern 
35
NMU - Whangarei 
Northern 
40
Main - Hamilton 
Midland 
89
Main - Rotorua 
Midland 
36
Main - Tauranga 
Midland 
48
Main - Te Awamutu 
Midland 
7
NMU - Hamilton 
Midland 
68
NMU - Rotorua 
Midland 
23
NMU - Tauranga 
Midland 
34
NMU - Taupo 
Midland 
5
Main - Gisborne 
Central 
22
Main - Napier/Hastings 
Central 
68
Main - New Plymouth 
Central 
25
Main - Palmerston North 
Central 
52
Main - Wanganui 
Central 
24
Main - Wellington 
Central 
197
NMU - Gisborne 
Central 
6
NMU - Napier/Hastings 
Central 
12
NMU - New Plymouth 
Central 
30
NMU - Palmerston North 
Central 
37
NMU - Wanganui 
Central 
14
Main - Kapiti 
Central 
17
NMU - Wairarapa-Wellington 
Central 
24
Main - Christchurch 
Southern 
173
Main - Dunedin 
Southern 
61
Main - Invercargill 
Southern 
29
Main - Nelson 
Southern 
32
NMU - Christchurch 
Southern 
76
NMU - Dunedin 
Southern 
35
NMU - Invercargill 
Southern 
25
NMU - Nelson 
Southern 
32
 
 
 
 
 
Centre for Social and Health Outcomes Research and Evaluation & Te Ropu Whariki 
62
Te Runanga, Wananga, Hauora me te Paekaka