Pubdate: Sat, 22 Jan 2000 Source: Billings Gazette, The (MT) Copyright: 2000 The Billings Gazette Contact: P.O. Box 36300, Billings, MT 59101-6300 Fax: 406-657-1208 Website: http://www.billingsgazette.com/ Author: Pat Bellinghausen, The Gazette Staff IV METH USE MAKES BILLINGS' PROBLEM UNIQUE Montanans should be concerned about a "stunningly large number of IV methamphetamine users," Dr. Donald Vereen Jr., a deputy director at the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy, said Friday in Billings. Vereen said that information he heard on his visit to Billings this week concerning the volume of intravenous methamphetamine abuse makes Montana's problem unique. Greater intravenous drug abuse increases the risk of transmitting the AIDS virus and the hepatitis C virus. Both of these incurable infectious diseases are known to be spread through needle-sharing by drug users. (Methamphetamine addicts also snort or smoke the drug.) "Montana is facing a huge, huge health problem because of that finding," said Vereen, a psychiatrist and public health expert. "The methamphetamine problem is even more of an emergency because of that. You're going to end up paying for the health problems." Sixty-three percent of the first 70 methamphetamine addicts to enroll in an outpatient treatment research project at the Mental Health Center in Billings have been IV users, project director Denna Vandersloot reported Thursday. And more than half of those who said they injected methamphetamine also said they had shared needles with other addicts. That preliminary data indicates that IV methamphetamine abuse is significantly higher in Montana than at the other six study sites in California and Hawaii, Vandersloot reported. Among all people coming into state-paid inpatient and outpatient programs in recent years for all chemical addictions, between 20 percent and 30 percent have reported some history of injecting drug abuse, according to statistics from the state Addictive and Mental Disorders Division. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D