Pubdate: Mon, 14 Apr 2003 Source: New Zealand Herald (New Zealand) Copyright: 2003 New Zealand Herald Contact: http://www.nzherald.co.nz/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/300 Author: Martin Johnston, Health Reporter Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) ALARM BELLS AS OVERDOSES TRIPLE The number of people suffering from overdoses of methamphetamine and some related drugs has tripled within five years at Auckland Hospital. The emergency department now has around one case every week on average. And even occasional users of methamphetamine, known as "speed", face a significant risk of suffering psychosis - a temporary or persisting mental disorder - a seminar on the drug was told. The Waitemata District Health Board, which runs regional drug and alcohol services in Auckland, is so concerned about the drug's rapidly rising popularity that it called health workers, police and Government representatives together at the seminar to highlight the problem and examine evidence on methamphetamine. The board wants a national strategy to reduce methamphetamine use. It has also joined the call by Gisborne pharmacists for the Government to reclassify, as prescription-only, the cough and cold medicines used for the illegal production of methamphetamine. The pseudoephedrine medicines can now be bought over the counter. The police believe methamphetamine and its purified form "P" have fuelled a rise in violent crime. Although alcohol remains the leading drug of abuse, health workers are trying to work out how to control the problems of methamphetamine, including the risks of spreading disease by injecting users sharing needles. Auckland Hospital physician Dr Lynn Theron told the seminar that the hospital's emergency department was seeing 50 to 60 patients a year who indicated they had overdosed on amphetamines. "Overdose presentations [from these drugs] have tripled in the last four or five years." They were mostly young Pakeha men, she said. Overdose patients disclosing they had taken GHB, a sedative, numbered 162 last year, compared with 21 in 1999, while Ecstasy cases rose to 47, from 16. An Auckland Hospital psychiatrist, Dr Angela Ryan, said methamphetamine-related psychosis could be brief, lasting four days or less, or could persist. The psychosis persisted beyond four days in a third of cases. Dr Ryan said that in 18 months working at Middlemore Hospital's acute psychiatric unit, she had 10 patients admitted after using methamphetamine. At least five of them developed schizophrenia for the first time or suffered the recurrence of it. Citing Japanese research, she said 6 per cent of occasional methamphetamine users suffered psychosis. The risk shot up to 50 to 60 per cent for heavily dependent users (although no distinction had been made between brief and persisting psychosis). " ... Once you have one psychotic episode the risk of having another is really high with reuse. You have to stop using, but these people are addicted, so it's an awful position for them to be in. "Because methamphetamine is a more potent stimulant than any other, it probably leads to progression to dependence quicker." No medicines have proved useful in treating methamphetamine addiction and there is only limited evidence of the benefit of behavioural therapies. The seminar's main speaker, Australian psychologist Dr Amanda Baker, said: "Little is known about how best to treat methamphetamine users." Parliament is expected to vote next month on upgrading methamphetamine to a class A drug, which would render dealers liable to life-imprisonment sentences. Methamphetamine facts * Street names include meth and speed. Crystallised form - with more intensive effects - known as ice, crystal, glass, burn, pure and P. * A stimulant that, like other amphetamines and cocaine, produces euphoria. Works by stimulating release of neurotransmitter chemicals like dopamine in the brain. * Use linked to violence and brief or persisting psychosis. Symptoms of psychosis can include delusions, hallucinations and paranoia. * Costs $80-$150 a "point" (0.1 of a gram), which can produce several hits. * 3.5 per cent of people in 2001 Auckland University-run survey were "current users" of amphetamines/methamphetamine; 2.2 per cent in 1998. * Around 17 per cent of clients at an Auckland drug and alcohol service were dependent on amphetamines early last year; 5.8 per cent in first half of 1999. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom