Pubdate: Fri, 09 Jul 2004 Source: Kamloops This Week (CN BC) Copyright: 2004 Kamloops This Week Contact: http://www.kamloopsthisweek.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1271 Author: Jeff Hodson Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) METH IS AFFORDABLE, POTENT AND ACCESSIBLE FOR YOUTH Crystal methamphetamine first emerged on the North American drug scene in the late 1980s. It appeared in Hawaii, looked like translucent crystal shards and had a cool moniker - Ice. "We are in an era of synthetic drugs," says RCMP Cpl. Scott Rintoul of the drug-awareness service. "The chemicals that are used to produce it are neurotoxic, they're carcinogenic . . . You're not going to drink iodine, you're not going to eat red phosphorus, drink acid or brake cleaners, ether - that's what's in methamphetamine." Crystal meth is "cooked" from a variety of household products and chemicals found in labs. The drug targets the brain's reward centre, mimicking the pleasure chemical dopamine, and tricks the brain's cells into releasing massive amounts of dopamine. The drug also disrupts the production of serotonin, the brain chemical responsible for sleep, cravings, mood and aggression. "It's extremely accessible," says Patrick MacDonald, supervisor of youth and family programs at the Phoenix Centre. "It's very affordable and it's a very long, intense high. All of those things make it extremely attractive." Prolonged use of the drug can result in kidney, heart and lung disorders, depression, hallucination, and paranoia. The most common methods of use are smoking, snorting and injecting. In Kamloops, the method of choice is snorting. The high can last between two and eight hours - six to eight times longer than cocaine. "It's real, it's not going away," says Bob Hughes, a youth addictions counsellor at the Phoenix Centre. Hughes hears the same doom and gloom he heard 10 years ago with the rise of crack cocaine - that "this is an epidemic and our cities are going to be destroyed by it - crack didn't go away, and meth won't go away." He says it's time to debunk the myth. The drug is very addictive, and it's not unusual for a client to become addicted quickly. "It doesn't mean the moment you try methamphetamine you're hooked . . . But the reality is if you keep trying it, if you keep experimenting with it, it's likely you will get dependent on it." In April, the B.C. Coroners Service released a report on the 31 methamphetamine-related deaths in B.C. between 2000 and 2004. The number jumped to 13 deaths in 2003 from two in 2000. By comparison, in 1998 there were 401 heroin-related deaths in Vancouver alone. The highest number of meth deaths occurred in the 19 to 21 age group. "You talk to kids in school and they'll tell you that they can go and buy a bag of pot or buy meth faster than they can buy cigarettes or a case of beer," Hughes says. Meth is a young person's drug for several reasons: It's cheaper than cocaine, lasts longer and is easy to market to kids because it doesn't yet carry the same negative, "dirty" connotations of crack cocaine. Tolerance to the drug builds quickly. Clients use more and more in an attempt to repeat the initial high, and often turn to other drugs to get the job done. Once communities accept that meth is here to stay, Hughes says, they can look at managing the drug. One of those ways is by controlling the drug's base - pulling ephedrine- and pseudo-ephedrine-based products, cough syrups and decongestants, off of store shelves. But, Rintoul says, 90 per cent of meth in B.C. is produced in "superlabs" capable of producing 10 pounds of the drug in 24 hours. The labs are run by organized crime, who purchase the chemicals through a variety of methods. He projects RCMP will bust more than 40 meth labs this year in B.C. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake