Pubdate: Sat, 24 Jul 2004 Source: Huntsville Times (AL) Copyright: 2004 The Huntsville Times Contact: http://www.htimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/730 Author: Wendy Reeves, Times Staff Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) METH USE DAMAGES KIDS, TOO Training Program Airs Strategies; See Lab Scenes From a Child's Perspective A shotgun rests on a sofa 36 inches from a little girl's baby doll. A pile of knives sits on the floor by the entrance to the children's bedroom. Syringes are in a drawer with a child's clothing. Methamphetamine is on top of the coffee table and television. This is how many children live when their parents or guardians are meth cooks or addicts - or, usually, both. Those scenarios were not entirely new to the social workers, law enforcement officers, drug counselors and even some of the concerned residents from across North Alabama attending a Methamphetamine Prevention Training program Friday at Alabama A&M. Cristi Cain and Laurie Harrison of the Kansas Methamphetamine Prevention Project presented Friday's sessions sponsored by U.S. Attorney Alice Martin of Alabama and the federal Drug Enforcement Administration. A show of hands indicated no one in the audience had ever heard of Drug Endangered Children strategies to help the children. "It's relatively new," said Cain. It started in California after a mother of four had three of her children die in a fire while she tried to destroy evidence of a meth lab - instead of trying to save her kids. Children found in homes with meth labs often suffer neglect, physical and sexual abuse, in addition to being exposed to the harmful chemicals. "We had a lab not too long ago where there was a little boy in there whose diaper had probably not been changed in two or three days," said Scottsboro police Sgt. Scott Whited. After Friday's training, he said he'll look at situations with kids differently. There is already protocol in place on dealing with children in a meth lab environment. In the most recent incident, he said an ambulance was called for the child, who eventually ended up in a Department of Human Resources foster home. The strategies Cain emphasized included teaching law enforcement to start looking at meth lab scenes from a child's perspective. It takes a little more time, but getting the height of the children and then taking measurements from that perspective in relation to dangerous elements in the home can help to keep a child from returning to such an environment. A Drug Endangered Children program involves law enforcement, child protective services, a district attorney's office and medical personnel. All work together for the best interest of the children. Clothing in all children's sizes, stuffed animals, and things like toothbrushes and toothpaste are kept on hand and readily available when children are found in that situation. Many times, the children must be decontaminated before they can be taken to a hospital for examination and treatment, said Cain. A simple preparation like the clothing can help lessen that trauma, she said. It's up to each community to set its protocol for dealing with drug-endangered children, she said. "It takes involvement on all levels." - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager