The number of people seeking help to quit synthetic cannabis has soared and is expected to rise further next month when 42 "legal highs" lose their interim state approval.
"We have even seen a marginal increase today," Dr Susanna Galea, the clinical director of Auckland's state-funded Community Alcohol and Drug Service (CADS), said yesterday.
Two to four people a week were now seeking help from CADS for withdrawal from synthetic cannabis addiction, up from about one a week since August. The service estimates 40 per cent of people seeking its help use the drugs.
And among the 42 per cent of youth clients who used synthetic cannabis, 11 per cent suffered addiction or dependence and 9 per cent reported criminal or violent behaviour.
For those needing detoxification help for synthetic cannabis, it can take 14 days if they are treated as an in-patient, compared with 10 for alcohol withdrawal.