Pubdate: Sun, 26 Oct 2003 Source: Observer, The (UK) Copyright: 2003 The Observer Contact: http://www.observer.co.uk/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/315 Author: Jo Revill 'HE TURNED AND TOLD ME HE WAS GOD' For years, Andrew had been smoking joints, hanging around with boys slightly older than himself in his Worcestershire village. An intensely bright student who took all his exams two years early, it seemed to do him no harm. It was on a trip to New Zealand to see relatives that this changed. He had backpacked around the islands, smoked a fair amount of dope, made some new friends. 'He came back a different person,' his mother Pauline recalled. 'At first I thought it was jet lag, but then I realised this was something different. He turned to me and said he was God, and could blow out all the windows in our town just by thinking about it.' At age 17 Andrew became a patient in the local psychiatric unit run by the Worcestershire Mental Health Trust. He would spend the next two and a half years being admitted and then discharged. His father, Peter, was astonished at the ease with which his son could obtain the drug, even on the ward where he was being treated for cannabis-induced psychosis. 'I remember one day when I gave him UKP5, because he had no money on him. We were sitting outside in the corridor after visiting him, and this guy walked past. He waved a UKP5 at me, the same one I'd given my son. We'd seen this man walk into the ward with a bag which obviously contained drugs. The staff didn't want to know.' Their situation reached a crisis last August, when Andrew disappeared from his ward. He had withdrawn more than UKP250 in benefits from the hospital accounts department, and had his passport on him. He went to Paris, and spent eight days there, sleeping rough, once even walking into a hospital. On 29 August Pauline received a call from the British Embassy in Paris, who told her they were putting her son on the next Eurostar train to London, unescorted, and demanding her credit card number for payment. Andrew got back home that Friday night. 'He was exhausted, dirty, hungry, completely wiped out by the experience,' his mother said. Worse was to come. Against his parents' wishes, a mental health team, two police cars and three social security officers arrived at 4am on the Sunday to take Andrew to a private psychiatric ward in London. 'We had begged them to let him sleep because he was so tired. But instead they completely overreacted, and insisted on him leaving immediately, arguing that he might be dangerous - yet he's never been violent or aggressive.' Andrew was put into the back of a private minivan, with barred windows, separated from his mother who was in the back of the van, and driven down to London. Her son is now in a private clinic in east London, but his care is paid for by the NHS. The security there is far tighter and every package taken in is searched. 'For the first time, he's having to manage without cannabis,' his father said. 'What I dread is that he'll come back here and go straight out and get some again, and the delusions and the voices will start up.' Their case is the subject of an investigation by an independent official, who will decide whether there should be a fuller independent inquiry. Worcestershire Mental Health Trust did not want to comment on the case, on the grounds of patient confidentiality. . The family's names have been altered to protect their anonymity. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman