Pubdate: Sun, 26 Jun 2005 Source: Sun News (Myrtle Beach, SC) Copyright: 2005 Sun Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.myrtlebeachonline.com/mld/sunnews/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/987 Author: Lindsay Nash, The Associated Press Note: apparent 150 word limit on LTEs Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) METH ADDICTS TO GET HELP Government Finances Program In Buncombe County ASHEVILLE, N.C. - Christine Andaya remembers the times when she really wanted to quit. After taking a GED test on a three-day high from methamphetamine, she thought buses were following as she and her mother drove home. She then ran to a bedroom closet, hid and cried. During another high, Andaya thought she could copy her entire French textbook in one night. She once also thought people jogging by were hopping rabbits. But last week, 39-year-old Andaya celebrated her 21st year of being drug-free. She now plans to help other recovering meth addicts in Buncombe County as part of the state's second government-funded program for treating meth addictions. The need largely has been overlooked nationwide. Watauga County started North Carolina's first program after having led the state in meth busts. "People can quit, but they need a lot of support behind them and a real desire to do it," said Andaya, who is working to become a real estate agent. Discoveries of meth-making labs have soared in recent years. Law-enforcement officers in North Carolina swooped in on 243 labs last year, up from nine in 1999. With a $250,000 grant, drug-addiction consultant Leslie McCrory is pairing with Buncombe County's Department of Social Services to offer treatment to meth addicts. "It's prevalent in young kids, in the gay population, the young professionals, and in this area, blue-collar workers," McCrory said. "It's really a problem in Rutherford County, where jobs are gone, plants are closing and there is an economic depression." Whether it's smoked, snorted, swallowed or injected, methamphetamine is more addictive and more damaging to the brain than cocaine, heroin and most other illegal drugs. It's also unusually efficient at ruining lives. "If the adults use it, the kids are going to be around it and get roped in," said Dr. William Haning, director of the Addiction Psychiatry Residency Program at the University of Hawaii's medical school. "As crazy as this sounds, the parent won't necessarily see this as a bad thing." Many recovering meth addicts say they were hooked after using the drug once. It takes meth addicts 12 to 24 months to fight back from their habit. Recent studies show meth does more damage to the brain than other drugs. A 2004 study by UCLA researchers showed meth causes "severe gray-matter deficits" in the brain - comparable to the damage apparent in the early stages of dementia. Meth addiction is facilitated by a misconception - that it's safe to use because amphetamines have legitimate medical uses as weight-loss aids or to treat sleep disorders or attention deficit disorder in children. "People claim that it helps them work better," Haning said. "It's sometimes easier for the family to legitimize usage." The meth trend started in California, where Andaya first tried it at age 16. "It was totally recreational," said Andaya, who grew up in San Diego. "We would have just enough to get a really good high and have some left over for the next time. I felt good on it. It sped up my mind." Addiction leads to psychotic or violent behavior and brain damage. Withdrawal symptoms include depression, anxiety, fatigue, paranoia and aggression. The new treatment program in Buncombe County is based on the Matrix Institute model from California, which touts a 50 percent recovery rate. The local program should go into effect July 1. Setting it apart from other drug-recovery programs, the Matrix model is a one-year program with a 16-week intensive treatment period. Participants will meet nine hours a week for the intensive treatment. For the remainder of the year, they will meet once a week for group support. Along with education, there will be family, group and individual therapy. The program can handle about 40 participants per year. It will be free, but addicts must go through a screening process, McCrory said. Andaya's habit turned into an addiction within a year. After a teenage pregnancy and an abusive boyfriend, she knew she had to get away from it or her baby daughter would suffer. She weighed 75 pounds when she left her familiar world of drugs in California. Bones protruded from her feet and back, making it painful to walk or lie down. In South Carolina, she became a paralegal and later moved to Paris, where she worked for an international company. She never again did a "line," understanding she had things for which to live, now including a husband and three children. Andaya's cravings for the drug lasted 20 years. She credits her therapy for becoming who she is now. "That's when I figured things out," she said. "I had to change my thinking patterns." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin