Pubdate: Wed, 07 Jul 2004 Source: Tennessean, The (TN) Copyright: 2004 The Tennessean Contact: http://www.tennessean.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/447 Author: Leon Alligood, Staff Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) WARN PEOPLE ABOUT METH, TASK FORCE TOLD COOKEVILLE, Tenn. - Educating the public about the dangers of methamphetamine abuse should be a major thrust of any effort to combat abuse of the homemade drug, the Governor's Task Force on Methamphetamine Abuse was told yesterday. "One of the things I've found out in talking about meth is that people constantly say they didn't know about it, or that it was as big a problem as it is," said Dr. Sullivan Smith, a member of the task force and an emergency room physician in Cookeville. "We've got to get this information out. Education is vital to this kind of initiative," he said. The task force, which has been mandated to make recommendations on a comprehensive methamphetamine policy to Gov. Phil Bredesen by Sept. 1, heard yesterday about two educational tools that have been developed for the Upper Cumberland region. That section of Tennessee has been the site of hundreds of methamphetamine arrests in the past decade. The first is a 35-page meth prevention handbook published by the 13th Judicial District Drug Task Force. Several thousand copies are being distributed through local law enforcement, youth organizations, churches and civic groups. The 13th Judicial District is made up of Clay, Cumberland, DeKalb, Overton, Pickett, Putnam and White counties. Task force members received a preview of an interactive CD-ROM produced by the Tennessee Tech Business Media Center in conjunction with the Putnam County Health Department. "It's an educational toolkit," said Kevin Liska, director of the Business Media Center. "It has a total of five hours of content on the CD that should answer just about any question about meth for people from a wide range of kinds of jobs," Liska said. For instance, law enforcement officers can use the CD to watch digital video clips of interviews with people in that field who have "front-line experience with meth," Liska said. "We've tried to find experts in every field to talk about meth. We need to get people listening and talking about meth in a way that we haven't up till now," said Jerrod Wright, a public health educator for the Putnam County Health Department. "It's going to take everybody - law enforcement, prosecutors, people in the mental health field - to work together to try and come to a solution on this growing problem," he said. Wright said the price of the interactive CD will be kept to a minimum so the CD can be used beyond the boundaries of the 13th Judicial District. Methamphetamine is a homemade drug manufactured using household chemicals such as lye and brake fluid. Its primary ingredient is pseudoephedrine, which is found in many over-the-counter cold remedies. According to the federal Drug Enforcement Agency, more labs - in excess of 1,100 - were seized in Tennessee last year than in the rest of the Southeast. The Governor's Task Force on Methamphetamine Abuse met at Tennessee Tech University, marking the first time it has convened in Middle Tennessee since its opening session in Nashville. The task force's next meeting will be in Tullahoma on July - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake