Pubdate: Thu, 04 Dec 2003 Source: Oak Ridger (TN) Copyright: 2003 The Oak Ridger Contact: http://www.oakridger.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1146 Author: Beverly Majors Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) METH'S IMPACT ON ANDERSON COUNTY Exploring possible solutions Anderson County Sheriff Bill White spent two days at the Methamphetamine Response conference in Nashville, where he learned what issues other agencies are having with the manufacturing of meth and discussed ways to resolve some of those issues. The conference, called Methamphetamine Response: A Multidiscipline Approach to Protecting Tennessee Communities, was held Monday through Wednesday in Nashville. The conference was sponsored by many Tennessee agencies and organizations whose offices have been affected by the growing number of clandestine labs found in Tennessee or the people making the illegal and volatile drug. Pictured are blister packs from over-the-counter cold medicine and an empty can of Coleman fuel that were found in a meth lab earlier this year. Speakers in workshops at the conference discussed many aspects of methamphetamine including manufacturing issues, child and family endangerment, investigations, community education, risks and strategies and resources. In Monday's workshop, retailers were targeted in an effort to teach them what to look for when customers are purchasing products associated with making meth. Later this week, the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation will initiate the Tennessee Meth Watch. Retailers will have a toll-free number to call to report suspicious purchases and be given posters about products and Tennessee Meth Watch stickers to place inside store doors and at cash registers. The program is geared to help catch people who are making meth in clandestine labs in their home or other places. Health issues were on the table on Tuesday, with the focus on children in homes where meth is being made and its effect on them. Also discussed on Tuesday was the issue of decontamination and health care professionals as well as others who have become sick because of meth-laced clothing and chemicals found in bodily fluids. Chief Deputy Lewis Ridenour, who attended the conference on Monday, said Anderson County deputies and jailers have not become ill because the Sheriff's Department takes precautions when going into a house where a lab is and when removing someone from a lab. "We dress them (meth makers) out in protective clothing and then have them shower when we take them to jail," Ridenour said. According to the Associated Press, Barry S. Wagner, director of medical recruiting at Emergency Coverage Corp. in Knoxville and a member of the Cumberland Medical Center in Crossville, said at the conference that health care professionals have been sickened by the stench of a drug user's clothes and chemicals found in bodily fluids. "We don't have all the answers because all the answers don't exist," he said Tuesday during a panel discussion at the three-day Methamphetamine Response Conference. "If you treat this as a typical diagnostic problem, you're going to come out on the short end of the stick." Typically, emergency room personnel are taught the ABCs of treatment: airway, breathing, circulation. But when dealing with a meth user, "D" for decontamination must come first. Wagner recommended that emergency staff immediately undress a meth user, then bag and burn the clothes at a secure site. Currently, Tennessee is second in the nation in meth production, according to U.S. District Attorney James Vines of Nashville, who was among several officials to say that the drug is the worst they've dealt with in their careers. During fiscal 2000, 235 clandestine meth labs were found in Tennessee. In fiscal 2003, which ended in September, 1,154 labs were found, said Harry Sommers of the federal Drug Enforcement Administration. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh