Pubdate: Thu, 23 Oct 2003 Source: Smithers Interior News (CN BC) Copyright: 2003, BC Newspaper Group Contact: http://www.interior-news.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1631 Author: Heather Ramsay Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) COMMUNITY-WIDE RESPONSE SOUGHT FOR CRYSTAL METH PROBLEM With 20/20 hindsight, 17-year-old Devon Fuller from Houston wonders why anyone would want to take the extremely popular and highly addictive methamphetamine known as crystal meth. But what he knows now and what he knew back in May are worlds apart. Back then Fuller spent the entire month high on crystal meth - at one point awake for 13 days straight. "I lost 30 pounds in one month. I couldn't sleep or eat," he said. Although he claimed he tried to stay away from the drug, most of the friends he has known since childhood were doing it and he started to. "When you're on it you just want to do it again," he added. The drug produces an exquisite high, a spike of dopamine that stimulates the highly addictive euphoric period of pleasure. But what follows is a crashing low of hallucinations, paranoia and psychosis. The only relief from the crash is to take the drug again, creating a snowball effect. "I started to get really paranoid. I felt things that didn't touch me. I would walk down the street seeing people come toward me that I thought were going to beat me up, but there was no one there," said Fuller. According to Fuller, the drug is easy to come by in Smithers and Houston and one friend of his has already died because of crystal meth. This is exactly the type of information that prompted community members to put on a forum in Smithers last week to discuss the issue that is sweeping through this area and others across B.C. and the continent. The drug is cheap, easily produced and gives a sustained high, lasting up to 10 times longer than other euphoric drugs like cocaine. Crystal meth works by activating serotonin and dopamine production which stimulate the pleasure centres in the brain. But dopamine also kills brain cells and some researchers believes that in young users it halts the development of the part of the brain that links cause and effect. More than 40 different social service providers, educators, RCMP officers, youth, parents, ambulance and firefighters came to what organizer Nathan Cullen called a first step in the response to crystal meth in the community. "This is an effort to wrap-around services and provide a cohesive response to the kind of compassionate work that needs to be done to get a kid to where they need to be," said Cullen, who first became aware of the issue after The Interior News reported that the drug had fuelled a rash of break-ins early in the summer. The group heard from Corporal Scott Rintoul, a drug awareness co-ordinator with the RCMP in Vancouver, who had been involved in a similar forum that recently took place in the city. "This is great - a small community taking the initiative on this problem," said Rintoul, who suggested that Smithers might be the envy of the north because he hasn't heard of any other places where such a proactive approach has been taken. And Rintoul was quick to point out that this is a community-wide problem because it affects all members. Police, emergency departments, social workers, business owners, users and non-users alike are affected by crystal meth - by the health problems and the crime that using the drug can lead to. School trustee Bob Haslett attended the forum and said his concern was that there is a direct correlation between drugs and drop-outs. "They miss sections of school because of drug use, then they fall behind, they fail tests and they get frustrated," he said. For Haslett the frustration is that kids aren't able to live up to their full potential. He, like most of those at the forum, agreed that education is a large part of prevention. But it is not just the kids that need to be educated; it's the parents, too. "Once the school gets involved it is usually too late in the process," said Haslett. Cullen agrees that awareness of the issue has to be raised on many fronts, including shop owners who sell the easily attainable supplies needed to produce the drug in basement labs. The group of people that attended the first forum have agreed to come together again to discuss how to target different groups, in the hopes that awareness may help save some young lives. Charged with a recent robbery, Fuller decided while in jail that he didn't want that kind of life and chose to get off crystal meth. His probation officer suggested he attend the forum. Fuller said that this forum was the first place he found any real information about the drug. He experienced first hand the periods of psychosis and other harmful physical effects, such as how it burns the skin on contact. But he was unaware, for example, that the drug is thought to bring on schizophrenia in those predisposed to it. Fuller had been diagnosed, before his crystal meth binge, with bi-polar disorder - in other words manic depression, - and wonders what effect the drug has had on that part of his life. - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk