Research article2019Peer reviewed
Music festivals and drugs: Wastewater analysis
Mackulak, Tomas; Brandeburova, Paula; Grencikova, Anna; Bodik, Igor; Stanova, Andrea Vojs; Golovko, Oksana; Koba, Olga; Mackulakova, Marketa; Spalkova, Viera; Gal, Miroslav; Grabic, Roman
Abstract
Drug consumption in individual cities, regions, and at various music events and festivals across the EU has generally been monitored via questionnaires, patients' medical data, and police reports. However, an overview of drug consumption obtained from these methods can be negatively affected by various subjective factors. We aimed to investigate an association between levels of target drugs in wastewater, music genres, and festival courses. The occurrence of illicit drugs, their metabolites, and psychoactive compounds was investigated in the influent of six wastewater treatment plants in the Czech and Slovak Republic during seven large-scale music festivals from different music genres: metal, rock, pop, country and folk, ethnic, multi-genre, dance, and trance. The total number of participants included N130,000 active festival attendees. The association between music genre and illicit drug and/or psychoactive pharmaceutical consumptions is discussed on the basis of the results obtained through wastewater analyses. The observed trend was similar to worldwide published data with a specific local phenomenon of methamphetamine prevalence that did not significantly change between music events. Increased specific loads of cocaine (measured as its metabolite benzoylecgonine) and Ecstasy, along with some cannabis, were mainly observed during pop/rock and dance music festivals. However, there was no significant increase observed in the specific loads of all monitored psychoactive pharmaceuticals. This study demonstrates that the abuse of some illicit drugs is closely associated with specific music preferences. (c) 2018 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Keywords
Music festivals; Wastewater analysis; Drugs abuse; Psychoactive pharmaceuticals
Published in
Science of the Total Environment
2019, Volume: 659, pages: 326-334
UKÄ Subject classification
Substance Abuse
Publication identifier
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.scitotenv.2018.12.275
Permanent link to this page (URI)
https://res.slu.se/id/publ/102229