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Lack of internet affordability may worsen Australia’s digital divide: new report

  • Written by: Julian Thomas, Director, Social Change Enabling Capability Platform, RMIT University
imageAn affordability gap and increasing reliance on mobile data could limit internet access for some Australians. 29233640@N07/flickr , CC BY-SA

We often think of the internet as a levelling, democratising technology – one that extends access to knowledge, education, cultural resources and markets.

But the net also reflects the social and...

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Weekly Dose: anaesthetic and recreational drug ketamine could be used to treat depression

  • Written by: Julaine Allan, Senior Research Fellow, Charles Sturt University
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A small number of people, who probably use other party drugs, use ketamine recreationally. 

Ketamine hydrochloride is an anaesthetic that causes people to feel disconnected from their bodies. At low doses, they remain conscious and can talk but do not feel pain. At higher doses, ketamine is used to induce a trance-like state or sedate people with burns or other traumatic injuries.

The drug can be used to perform short operations, particularly on children who are allergic to other drugs. Vets also use ketamine as an anaesthetic.

A small number of people, usually those who also use other party drugs, use ketamine as a recreational drug. Recreational users are seeking the relaxed and disconnected feeling it causes, as well as hallucinogenic effects that change sight, sound and touch. People may take ketamine accidentally because it is sold as ecstasy or is mixed with ecstasy.

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In Australia, ketamine is a Schedule 8 or controlled drug sold as Ketamine APOTEX, Ketalar or Ketamine-Claris. For animals, it’s sold as Ketaset, Vetalar and Vetaket. Ketamine is produced as liquid in small bottles for medical use. The liquid is evaporated for recreational use to make a white powder that is snorted, swallowed, or dissolved in water and injected. Read more – A short history of anaesthesia: from unspeakable agony to unlocking consciousness A brief history of ketamine Ketamine was discovered in 1962 and approved for use in the United States as a battlefield anaesthetic during the Vietnam war. Calvin L. Stevens, a professor of chemistry at Wayne State University, made ketamine when he was conducting research on phencyclidine – an anaesthetic also known as angel dust, which worked well but caused hallucinations in people as they woke up. Ketamine was named CI-581 and was one-tenth as strong as phencyclidine. After research on animals, ketamine was tested on human prisoners in 1964 and 1965. Guenter Corssen, a professor of anaesthetics, conducted experiments on CI-581 using prisoners who had volunteered. He found it was a fast-acting anaesthetic that wore off quickly. Corssen reported that some of the men it was tested on had hallucinations. These included thinking they had died, their arms and legs had been cut off, or they had been to outer space. Some refused to continue in the research. Corssen was the first to call ketamine a dissociative anaesthetic, meaning it causes you to feel disconnected from your body. Ketamine is now on the World Health Organisation’s list of essential drugs as an anaesthetic. Ketamine is complicated to make, so is not made illegally. Drug companies manufacture it for medical and veterinary treatment. Who uses ketamine? Ketamine started being used as a recreational drug in the 1970s because of its dissociative and hallucinogenic effects. But not many people use ketamine. Use in the past 12 months is reported to be around 0.4% of the Australian population. Only 1.7% ever use ketamine in their lifetime. Lifetime use has doubled since 1999, suggesting greater availability of ketamine for those who want to try it. Most people using ketamine will be health or medical professionals who can get it in their workplace, or people in the dance club culture who are likely to use other drugs. Effects and risks Studies conducted in the 1990s found ketamine caused the same symptoms as schizophrenia – unusual thoughts, hallucinations, trouble explaining things (disorganised speech), emotional withdrawal and difficulty moving. The effects of ketamine are related to the amount taken. A dose of 1-2mg per kilogram of body weight produces an intense experience lasting about one hour. Effects start in less than five minutes if injected, or 30 minutes if swallowed. The effects last about one hour, with all effects wearing off after two to three hours. image

Ketamine has reportedly been used as a date rape drug. from www.shutterstock.com Larger doses of ketamine cause an anaesthetic effect, or what recreational users refer to as a “K-hole”. A K-hole is generally reached when the user is nearly fully sedated and is described as similar to an out-of-body or near-death experience. High doses of ketamine can cause breathing problems, muscle twitches, dizziness, slurred speech, nausea and vomiting. People may be injured because of problems with balance, numbness, muscle weakness and poor vision. Probably due to its anaesthetic properties, ketamine has been reported as a “date rape” drug. There are few reports of overdose or death from ketamine. Dosage is controlled in medical settings according to body weight, and recreationally people tend to use less. The greatest risk is when ketamine is combined with alcohol or other central nervous system depressants, such as opioids or benzodiazepines, which can affect breathing and cause death. Read more – Weekly Dose: Valium, the ‘safer choice’ that led to dependence and addiction Ketamine-related deaths can be because of accidents while affected. An example would be drowning in a bath after taking ketamine and losing consciousness. Possible future uses Even though it’s a nervous system depressant, ketamine stimulates circulation. This means it doesn’t cause low blood pressure like most anaesthetics, making it useful for treating people with head injuries. Ketamine has been used as an antidepressant for people with treatment-resistant depression. A low dose of ketamine is given intravenously, with patients reporting effects in two hours that lasted one or two weeks. Although the quality of the evidence supporting positive effects is generally low, initial studies have resulted in interest because ketamine works quickly and appears to work on different receptors to traditional antidepressants. Read more – Special K: ketamine’s road from tranquilliser to possible antidepressant Ketamine is not approved for the treatment of depression, so this is an off-label use. From June this year a nasal-spray form of ketamine (esketamine) started clinical trials for treatment of depression. Australia is conducting the world’s largest study of ketamine as a treatment for depression. A trial of regular ketamine injections helped older people with depression feel less depressed, with about half reporting no depression six months later. But the researchers are cautious about the results because only 16 people participated in the trial. Another trial is under way with different age groups of people who have tried other treatments that have not reduced their depression. Evidence is still limited on ketamine’s effect on depression, the side effects, length of time it is safe to use and if tolerance to the drug will become a problem for people who use it.

Authors: Julaine Allan, Senior Research Fellow, Charles Sturt University

Read more http://theconversation.com/weekly-dose-anaesthetic-and-recreational-drug-ketamine-could-be-used-to-treat-depression-81468

UK crackdown on gender stereotypes in advertising shows up Australia's low bar

  • Written by: Michelle Smith, Research Fellow in English Literature, Deakin University
imageAustralia has largely moved beyond acceptance of extremely objectifying ads for products with no inherent connection with sex.Supplied, CC BY-NC-SA

From next year, TV advertisements that play on gender stereotypes, or that mock people who fail to conform to them, will not be permitted by the UK’s Advertising Standards Authority.

The kinds of...

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Here's why it's so hard to say whether inequality is going up or down

  • Written by: Peter Whiteford, Professor, Crawford School of Public Policy, Australian National University

Is inequality rising or falling? The answer, if recent public debate is anything to go by, may appear at first to depend on who you ask.

Part of the reason why we get such conflicting narratives about whether it’s rising or falling is that economic inequality can be measured in different ways, using different data sets.

And you might get a...

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More Articles …

  1. Bitcoin splits and Bitcoin Cash is created. Explaining why and what happens now
  2. More than 'slacktivism': we dismiss the power of politics online at our peril
  3. Home ownership falling, debts rising – it's looking grim for the under 40s
  4. Men still prefer mothers to stay at home: 12 charts on attitudes to work and family
  5. Australians want more children than they have, so are we in the midst of a demographic crisis?
  6. Pokies, sport and racing harm 41% of monthly gamblers: survey
  7. Curious Kids: What's going to happen to the Sun in the future? Will it explode?
  8. Affordable housing shortfall leaves 1.3m households in need and rising – study
  9. NAPLAN is ten years old – so how is the nation faring?
  10. The Method gone bananas? How motion capture actors are embracing their inner ape
  11. 'Just do the weather': does it matter if TV weather presenters aren't experts?
  12. So many in the West are depressed because they're expected not to be
  13. Party turmoil over way ahead on same-sex marriage
  14. Trump's Obamacare repeal attempt fails in US Senate
  15. Like a TARDIS in your head, memory helps you travel through time
  16. Workers are actually feeling less insecure in their jobs
  17. Security gets $1.2b, community programs to counter violent extremism $40m – that's a foolish imbalance
  18. The good news and bad news about the rare birds of Papua New Guinea
  19. Bottleshops affect people's health, so our laws need to reflect that
  20. Universities unveil plan to reduce sexual harassment and sexual assault on campus
  21. Climate change set to increase air pollution deaths by hundreds of thousands by 2100
  22. A full ban on political donations would level the playing field – but is it the best approach?
  23. Why are there so few women screen composers?
  24. Universities have a problem with sexual assault and harassment: here's how to fix it
  25. Voluntary assisted dying is not a black-and-white issue for Christians – they can, in good faith, support it
  26. Three charts on: who is the typical investor in the Australian property market?
  27. Vanishing Australian backyards leave us vulnerable to the stresses of city life
  28. Planners know depressingly little about a city's impacts on our mental health
  29. Facebook is fighting social media identity theft in India, but it's a global problem
  30. Spilling blood in art, a tale of tampons, Trump and taboos
  31. How to know what you're getting when you buy free-range eggs
  32. Showdown on same-sex marriage looming within the Liberals
  33. New research highlights challenges of building networks for employees and entrepreneurs
  34. Les Murray's death deprives football in Australia of its most passionate and inspiring voice
  35. Explainer: how to extend your phone's battery life
  36. Australia leads the world in hepatitis C treatment – what's behind its success?
  37. We’ve got to stop meeting like this
  38. How farming giant seaweed can feed fish and fix the climate
  39. Is there such a thing as a 'true self'?
  40. Cancer immunotherapy drugs like Keytruda and Opdivo hold hope for some, but there's still a way to go
  41. Downsizing cost trap awaits retirees – five reasons to be wary
  42. Snakebites are rarer than you think, but if you collapse, CPR can save your life
  43. Ice causes death in many ways, overdose is just one of them
  44. Who are you calling 'anti-science'? How science serves social and political agendas
  45. Loss, trials, and compassion: the music of Australia's Jewish refugees
  46. Discontents: identity, politics and institutions in a time of populism
  47. Pig-hunting dogs and humans are at risk of a disease that can cause miscarriages and infertility
  48. Government calls for release of costings as Labor unveils trusts crackdown
  49. The government is backing the wrong industries, as our economy changes: Productivity Commission
  50. Turnbull's chief-of-staff is the new defence head

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