Pubdate: Wed, 17 Nov 2004 Source: Goldstream Gazette (CN BC) Copyright: 2004 Goldstream Gazette Contact: http://www.goldstreamgazette.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1291 Author: Rick Stiebel, News Gazette staff Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) MOTHER, DAUGHTER TEAM SHARES DRUG KNOWLEDGE A mother-daughter team added powerful personal perspective to the menace of crystal meth at a Drug Information Night for Parents last week. Gabriella Reuben, a Victoria teenager in her seventh month of recovery from crystal meth addiction, and her mother, Joanne Reuben, answered questions from an attentive audience of about 200 parents during the forum at Isabelle Reader Theatre Nov. 9. Gabriella, demonstrating a surprising maturity and candor for someone weeks away from their 17th birthday, said crystal meth is everywhere. She first heard about the drug while in a detox centre for cocaine. Many of the kids her own age treated detox as a place to get some rest, and couldn't wait to get out and use crystal meth again, she said. Gabriella, who started her journey into addiction smoking marijuana when she was nine, said a big part of the appeal of crystal is that it is so cheap and easy to get. At the height of her use, she was probably spending only $20 a day to support her habit. Asked if marijuana was a gateway drug, she said based on what she learned during treatment for her own tendencies, it was for her, but that isn't the case with everyone. Staying clean is still a struggle at times. "There are good days and bad days," she said, but the support she gets from her family has been a huge help. "It will always be a part of my life...there are times when I crave it. I have to find the strength." The memory of what she had done to her life help her deal with the depression and craving that still surfaces. "I feel gross when I think about it," she said. Her response to whether she has considered giving talks to schools elicited a spontaneous burst of applause from the 200 people in attendance, when she admitted this was the first time she had publicly discussed her problem and fielded questions about it. "It's something I would consider," Gabriella said. Her mother, Joanne, described dealing with her daughter's meth addiction as a life or death situation. "There's no funding for treatment for kids 16 and 18," Joanne told the gathering. "Your hands are tied." At one desperate point when she realized help wasn't available, she even tried to get Gabriella into the Eric Martin Pavilion, just to get her off the street. "You go on your gut, your intuition and your passion," Joanne said in describing her decision to put her daughter in a car and drive her to Canmore, Alberta to help her through a nerve-wracking 10-day detoxification. Although she wouldn't necessarily recommend that route to other parents, she was fortunate to have the resources and support in Canmore to help get through the ordeal, she said. "There are factions that want to do something," Joanne said, "but they don't have an overview of the nature of the drug, the insanity." She said an overall strategy is needed that involves detox, after detox and the other steps that come after. Steve Freng, prevention treatment manager for the Northwest High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area in Seattle, Washington, also gave a power-point presentation outlining how quickly crystal meth use skyrocketed to epidemic proportions. Historically, meth use was primarily an amphetamine manufactured in California by biker gangs that kept the formula secret, Freng said. "The name crank came about becasue they used to transport it in the crank shaft of their bikes," he said. While the early form was a powerful substance that could provide a boost, it paled in comparison to what is available now. In the 1990s, students at Berkley University came across what is called the Nazi formula, one of the methods in use today for making crystal meth, Freng said. The formula, which can produce an ounce of pure crystal in 90 minutes, was concocted by the German army, which wanted something that could be produced without heat to give the troops in the field a boost. "It is the perfect drug for the '90s," said Freng, adding that it is the most seductive, insidious drug he has encountered in 30 years in his field. "It's cheap, it gives you energy, it keeps you thin, and you can make it in your kitchen." There are several methods in use to produce the same results, and as Freng attested, "the people running labs aren't exactly rocket scientists," and they don't care about harming their own children, their neighbours or the environment. While ephredine, the main element in crystal, is readily available in many over the counter cold remedies, Washington State has passed legislation limiting the number of packages purchased to three a day. Freng said there is discussion about taking that a step further by making all medications that contain ephredine require a prescription. Washington State's meth Watch program, launched in the wake of the proliferation of labs, provides another deterrant by having businesses that sell some of the other ingredients such as certain fertillizers, report suspicious purchases. Part of the problem is the equipment required to set up a lab will fit into two plastic tubs. "I won't rent a car without sniffing around the trunk," Freng said. He stressed the importance of public information meetings to educate the public on what to look for if there are suspicions about a lab in their neighbourhood. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D