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Drug mixed with human bones ravaging Sierra Leone

A new drug known as “kush” that turns users into “zombies” and is rumored to contain ground-up human bones is killing around a dozen people every week.

Not to be mistaken with the drug of the same name in the United States, this kush is spreading in countries across West Africa and is made of of different substances.

According to the Telegraph, this kush is made of a mixture of several substances, including cannabis, fentanyl, tramadol, formalin, formaldehyde, and, it is rumored, ground-up human bones.

It is believed that around one million people in the region are addicted to this “zombie” drug.

The drug has become commonplace across Sierra Leone, with whole neighbourhoods and communities addicted to the narcotic. But putting a precise figure on usage rates is difficult.

The Sierra Leone Psychiatric Teaching Hospital in Freetown says it has been overwhelmed with addicts in recent years. The number of referrals keeps rising on a daily basis, and many are sedated upon arrival at the facility due to their violent tendencies.

“We have already recorded nearly 2,000 cases of kush addicts in 2023 at the hospital. Many are dying in homes and on the streets,” Dr. Jusu Mattia, acting medical superintendent at the Sierra Leone Psychiatric Teaching Hospital, told the Telegraph.

Kush users have been reported to repeatedly bang their heads against walls, walk into traffic, and fall from high places to their deaths.

“Kush in Africa is a drug that contains a mixture of chemicals including tramadol (a synthetic opiate), cannabis, fentanyl and sometimes formaldehyde. It has become popular as it is affordable and widely available, both factors that drive drug use in any country,” Ian Hamilton, an associate professor of addiction at the University of York in the U.K., told Newsweek.

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Convivial · 26-30, F
I find the human bones bit fighting hard to swallow.
The reason being the first of getting the bones and then powdering them for no added benefit goes against best business practices... Possibly a superstitious rumour to add to its allure maybe
@Convivial Exactly.
@MsSwan True!

 
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