Pubdate: Tue, 09 Sep 2003 Source: Maui News, The (HI) Contact: 2003 The Maui News Website: http://www.mauinews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2259 Author: Mary Vorsino, The Associated Press Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) Note: To read about the "ice epidemic" in Hawaii, go to http://www.mapinc.org/areas/Hawaii . YOUNG, VERY YOUNG ARE 'ICE' VICTIMS They Start Young And Can't Beat Addiction; Some Have Babies With Health Problems HONOLULU -- They started as children. Many were in their early teens or younger when they got sold on the high from a drug that's cheaper than marijuana and more addictive than cocaine. Now the women at the Salvation Army's live-in treatment center in Kaimuki have children themselves -- underweight infants, toddlers with learning disabilities, teenagers at a high risk of following their mothers' leads and joining a second generation of crystal methamphetamine users. ''I wanted to stop, I just didn't know how,'' said one woman at the center, Denise Mejia, whose infant is oversensitive to light, touch and sound because her mother smoked crystal meth while pregnant. ''It's the plague.'' In a state where the drug known as ''ice'' has become a statewide epidemic, increasing numbers of young people are the victims and the newest users. For many, it's the drug of no choice. Those most vulnerable to its effects are exposed to the drug in the womb or and the home, in their neighborhoods and at school. Kiana Johnson, another mother at the center, also took ice while she was pregnant and later smoked the drug while cradling her son, letting the baby inhale the noxious fumes. Gavin -- who at 2 now has a chronic cough -- doesn't seem to hold it against her. The child, wide-eyed, scrawny for his age, jumpy and shy, playfully wears his flip-flops on his hands as he runs to hug his mom on a recent day at the center's nursery. When Johnson picks the boy up, he giggles at his joke and buries his face in her shoulder. ''My son is always sick,'' the mother had said earlier. ''And I think it's my fault.'' Gavin's health problems aren't uncommon for children whose mothers used crystal meth while pregnant. And the difficulties usually start at birth, said Dr. Mariailiana Stark of the University of Hawaii. According to a seven-year study recently released by the nurse practitioner, babies exposed to ice in the womb are more likely to require longer hospital stays, cry more and suffer from sleep problems, tremors, seizures and changes in respiratory rates. Anita Barshaw is an expert at taking care of those irritable infants. That's because over the past 15 years she has short-term foster parented 57 medically complex infants, many of whom were ice babies. Their average stay in her home was six months, just long enough for them to almost completely overcome their repulsion any kind stimulation, especially touch and sight, that healthy babies crave. ''You have to introduce anything that has to do with sensory input slowly,'' she said. ''Some of these babies can't even handle the bath.'' The first ice baby she cared for cried 22 hours a day for three straight weeks, she said. Now Barshaw is the coordinator for a Catholic Charities unit that handles infants with special needs, helping over 90 foster parents in Hawaii learn how to take care of ice infants who in most cases will have to be swaddled, fed away from the body and kept in a dark, quiet room for the first few months of their lives. Once the babies -- who are part of an increasing number of children taken away from their homes because of drug abuse -- are stable, they're either reunited with their parents or put up for adoption. The state Department of Human Services reports that of the 2,723 children taken away from their parents in 1992, 24.3 percent were removed from their homes for drug-related reasons. Ten years later, 49.4 percent of the 3,801 Hawaii children taken into custody were from homes where drugs were present. ''Ice has gotten significantly worse,'' said state social worker Jalene-Ann Mastin. ''This drug has such an extensive grip, I will close a case and then find out it comes back to us because of ice.'' Many of the 57 cases of child neglect on Mastin's desk relate to parents who inhale ice, she said. ''I get angry. This baby didn't ask to be born. I've got munchkins who tell me, 'Mommy was smoking again today.' They should be worrying about what's for lunch today.'' It's almost time for dinner at the Salvation Army center in Kaimuki and the 20 women staying at the home's cottages get their children ready for a quick trek to the grocery store, where the women learn how to shop on a budget and pick out healthy meals for their surrogate families. The mothers say they're lucky to be with their kids. They could be in jail or on the streets or on ice -- all places most have been before. But instead, they're staying with their young children in the center for six months, ''parenting sober for the first time'' and learning how to live without they high they once thought they could never give up, said Claire Woods, the center's executive director. Some of the moms have older children whose custody they've lost because of their addiction. Others admit that under the influence of ice they were monsters, not mothers. Kate, who did not want her last name used, said she's experienced both. The 31-year-old has lost custody of seven of her eight children. She said she took crystal meth just moments before opening the door to social workers and shoving her children -- the oldest at 14 -- out as they screamed, ''Mama, no.'' Kate even offered her baby -- the only child she has left -- to a drug dealer in exchange for another crystal meth hit. Luckily, she said, he refused. Statistics suggest that kids whose parents have been addicted to ice are more likely to go after the drug themselves. That's why the state funds Hina Mauka, a school-based treatment program that serves about 600 students from eight high schools on Oahu and three on Kauai. The drug treatment and counseling program is one of a number of such programs offered in 29 of the state's 42 public schools and it attracts teens by keeping their substance abuse confidential from their teachers and peers, even their parents. Colleen Fox, director of adolescent services at Hina Mauka, said about 35 percent of the students enrolled in the program during the 2002-2003 school year were steady ice users. ''The crystal meth problem has been ongoing for so long,'' she said. ''We expect to see much more.'' So does Elaine Wilson, the chief of the alcohol and drug abuse division at the state Department of Health. ''People are beginning to see it's people they know,'' she said. ''These people aren't in somebody else's neighborhood. They are not living in a bubble somewhere. They are living across the street from you. They have children. They have grandchildren.'' But there is some hope. A recent student survey by Wilson's division showed that the use of crystal meth among adolescents and teenagers who are not known to have tried other drugs has dropped off in recent years, probably because kids have less access to the drug. That doesn't reassure the women at the center -- a one-of-a-kind treatment program that fills the gap between detox and a job. Chantell, 25, who asked that her last name be withheld, didn't find out she was pregnant until she was arrested for ice and cocaine abuse at seven months. ''I'm glad that I got caught because it gives me a second chance to get my life back together,'' she said. ''Now my fear is someone is going to offer my son ice.'' - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk