Pubdate: Sat, 19 Jun 2004 Source: Daily Sentinel, The (CO) Copyright: 2004 Cox Newspapers, Inc. Contact: http://www.gjsentinel.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2084 Author: Erin McIntyre Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) METH PROBLEMS MOVING ACROSS NATION Methamphetamine use is creeping across the country in an eastward movement without discrimination of who it chooses to addict, an expert told attendees at the first West Slope Methamphetamine Symposium on Friday. The drug, also known as crystal meth or speed, has become a burden for law enforcement and the judicial system in Mesa County. The cheap, versatile drug is easy to buy and easy to make, and the health, legal and societal problems that come hand-in-hand with its use are on the move. "It has literally marched across the country," said Bruce Mendelson, Colorado Department of Human Services senior researcher. "It is definitely making inroads in the South, and it's starting to show up in some of the bigger Eastern cities." Meth used to be an almost exclusively Anglo drug, almost considered a "hillbilly" substance in some places, said Mendelson. More people are smoking it now instead of injecting it, he said. The drug is appealing in rural areas, because it is easily manufactured with household chemicals and over-the-counter medication. Addicts get a bigger bang for their buck, because the high lasts from eight to 16 hours, Mendelson said. "It's not like you have to grow coca leaves in your backyard," he said. "You can get this down the street." The drug destroys seratonin-delivering receptors in the brain, creating a paranoid addict without a conscience, he said. Meth production and trafficking isn't likely to slow anytime soon in Colorado, Mendelson said. A major international airport, Interstate 70 and a ready market for the drug keep the business going. In Colorado, the problem is migrating from its largest concentrations, in the northwestern and west central part of the state, measured by the rate of treatment reported by methodone and publicly funded programs. The drug is gaining popularity and migrating to other areas of Colorado. In the southern part of the state, the La Plata County Department of Human Services started noticing meth-related reports this year, said Assistant Director Lezlie Mayer. "It showed up suddenly," Mayer said. "We hadn't really tracked it before." This spring, they started getting as many as 15 calls a month related to the drug, Mayer said. Although the department hasn't dealt with meth labs in homes yet, it placed seven children and three families in other homes last month because of situations with methamphetamine. Mayer said she hoped the Durango area can prepare for dealing with the drug and avoid the epidemic ravaging the Grand Valley and northwestern Colorado. Mendelson's informal poll of clinicians and prevention workers in Colorado shows females, especially Hispanic females, are starting to use meth more than other groups of addicts. "It's a trifecta," he said. "It's a weight loss for the psychotropic effects, and they can work longer hours." Meth has gradually worked its way east from the Pacific, Mendelson said. "Ten years ago, this would have been a crowd in Hawaii or California," he said, looking at the crowd of 300 people. Officials don't know if the firewall of the Mississippi River will hold up to the eastward-moving meth trend. So far, it seems to be holding up. Mendelson did have nuggets of good news sandwiched in his dismal projections on meth use. "We're seeing about the same rate of rehabilitation from methamphetamine clients as we have with other drugs," he said, citing information from the Drug-Alcohol Coordinated Data System. A University of Michigan study that polled eighth-graders, high-school sophomores and seniors showed use of meth actually declined from 1999 to 2002. Mendelson said education and collaboration between agencies is vital to get a handle on the insidious drug. "We need to give people straight information. Scare tactics don't work," said Mendelson. "With methamphetamine, the truth is scary enough." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin