Pubdate: Sun, 25 Sep 2005 Source: Sioux City Journal (IA) Copyright: 2005 Sioux City Journal Contact: http://www.siouxcityjournal.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/945 Author: Alicia Ebaugh, Journal staff writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/women.htm (Women) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) CHILDREN OF METH USERS SUFFER FROM PARENTS' ADDICTION Celeste Seaton's troubled childhood led her to become hooked on methamphetamine at the age of 17. But now, after graduating from months of treatment for her addiction, the 20-year-old Sioux City woman can see how the drug has also affected her children's lives. Seaton first tried to quit for good when she knew she was pregnant with her daughter, Jaden. But after Jaden was born, Seaton said she started using again because she couldn't cope with the pressures of raising a child. It wasn't long before Department of Human Services officials took the 1-year-old out of the home and placed her into pre-adoptive foster care. She entered treatment twice in attempts to become sober and reunite with Jaden, but said she walked out of both within the first week. When she found out she was pregnant with her son, Jayson, she knew she needed help to stop. "I couldn't do it on my own. I was pretty depressed, and meth made me feel better," Seaton said. "But I didn't want to lose him, too ... I didn't want to start using again like I did after I had Jaden." She spent four months in outpatient treatment, and Jayson was born two days after she came to live at Jackson Recovery Center. As the 1-month-old heads home with her and her boyfriend, Steve Thompson, Seaton said she knows she has to concentrate on staying clean for both of her children -- or she may never see either of them again. "I want to have my daughter back," she said. "Sometimes I think I want to use again, but I look at him and Jaden and I just don't. I can't .. I screwed up a couple of times, but I want us all to be together." Impact On Children Jaden and Jayson are only two of many children in Northwest Iowa whose lives have been affected in some way by parental meth use. DHS statistics show that about 2,800 children are in foster care statewide each year -- and nearly 600 of those are in Northwest Iowa. Chuck Illg, DHS methamphetamine specialist for the Sioux City service area, said as many as 40 percent of these placements are related to their parents' drug addictions. Because meth has become the most popular drug of abuse behind marijuana in Iowa, he said, up to 80 percent of those cases include meth use. DHS spokesman Roger Munns said the agency doesn't normally track the number of cases it handles that specifically involve meth or any other drug, so it is sometimes hard to tell its effects. But within the last five years, caseworkers across the state have begun to realize meth's impact on the children they serve, he said. A 2003 DHS study in the Council Bluffs service area revealed that more than a third of all its cases included parental meth use. Last year alone, more than 1,700 Iowa children -- nearly 250 of which were from Northwest Iowa -- were found by DHS to have illegal drugs in their systems from inhaling smoke or touching drug paraphernalia. Most of these cases involved meth, DHS officials said. In addition, 15 of the 300 children statewide who were exposed to or lived in a residence containing a meth lab in 2004 lived in Northwest Iowa. Over the past two years, lawmakers have hoped to clean up some of the state's meth use by reducing the number of meth labs in Iowa, and one effort appears to have had some impact. After an Iowa law went into effect May 21 limiting the sale of products containing pseudoepedrine, a main meth ingredient, police reported finding nearly 75 percent fewer labs through June, July and August of this year than in those same months in 2004. But according to numbers provided by the Iowa Office of Drug Control Policy, a more modest 32.5 percent decrease in labs has been recorded in Northwest Iowa. The impact of the law may be relatively small on Iowa's children overall. Although it may have reduced the number of labs , thereby hopefully reducing the number of children exposed to the many dangers involved, at least 80 percent of Iowa's available meth supply continues to be imported across state lines. "People who want to use meth can still get it easily," Illg said. The Court Decides Last year the Woodbury County attorney's office filed more than 200 petitions to help protect 390 children in need of assistance throughout the county, said Dewey Sloan, assistant county attorney. Meth was involved in nearly 45 percent of these cases, he said. Children in need of assistance are those most likely to be abused or neglected, Sloan said. The juvenile court system determines the children's status according to guidelines in Iowa law. The court usually considers parental meth use to fall under the guidelines, bringing the children under the court's jurisdiction, he said. "The goal is to maintain unity with the parent and keep as much structure as possible, so first DHS tries to provide services to parents in the home," Sloan said. "If that doesn't work, the child is removed from the home. If the problem is too far gone to be solved, the rights of the parent are terminated so the child can move to an adoptive home." Half of the 68 petitions filed by the Woodbury County attorney's office to terminate parental rights to 130 children were related to meth use, he said, whether it involved the child being exposed to the drug or their parents being arrested for possession. Sloan deals with the repercussions of parental meth use in some form every day. He said that on just one day last week he had to argue two meth-influenced termination of parental rights cases. "In the first case the children had been left with the parents in a supervised setting, and the mother was found using again," he said. "In the other case, the parent was arrested for distribution." A juvenile judge ultimately decides whether a parent who has been addicted to meth can be a suitable guardian to their children. A Vicious Cycle Seaton said her attraction to meth had its roots in her troubled home life as a young teenager. Her parents, both alcoholics, were abusive and "didn't care much about us," she said. When she was 12 years old, she, her two brothers and older sister were removed from their parents' custody and put into foster care. "They didn't want to take care of us at all or get us back," she said. After six years in different foster homes, Seaton left to live with her sister. Her sister had introduced her to meth use, she said. Her sister's boyfriend, a drug dealer, provided them with all the meth they wanted. "Once I had it, I liked it, and I had to keep having more," Seaton said. But her problems didn't go away. Seaton said she coped with her unhappiness the best way she knew how -- by keeping up with an addiction, the only way she said her family had ever known. Increased Abuse, Neglect Children whose parents abuse drugs and alcohol are three times more likely to be abused and four times more likely to be neglected than are children whose parents are not substance abusers, according the Iowa Child Advocacy Board. These children are also more likely to mimic their parents' addictive and abusive behaviors themselves. "There are always more issues involved than just meth, although it is a huge part of the problem itself," said Chad Sims, DHS ongoing caseworker supervisor for the Sioux City service area. Meth is unique because it changes the chemistry of the brain and severely alters the waking and sleeping cycles, both of which greatly reduce the amount of parenting a meth addict can provide a child. "Many meth users have children, it's one of the main issues child welfare workers are facing right now," Munns said. "No drug could be worse for children. Long periods of comatose sleeping, sometimes for a day or so, follows a practically manic high in which the parent is all over the place. What's happening to their children during this time?" Shane Frisch, DHS intake caseworker supervisor for the Sioux City service area, said his workers encounter poor supervision from many parents using meth. Young children looking for toys to play will pick up pipes and other materials used to smoke it, or equipment used to make it. Older children develop behavioral issues and start staying out late and getting into trouble because their parents aren't paying attention. Bad grades result from not getting help with homework. Women who use meth while they are pregnant can create developmental and medical problems for their babies that will stay with them for their entire lives. Children with problems like those caused by meth exposure have a harder time being adopted if their parents rights are terminated, Frisch said. "I can't imagine what a child goes through being separated from his or her parent. That's trauma," Sloan said. "But imagine if you had to see your mom or dad arrested, taken away in handcuffs. Or seeing them beat up, or strung out." Rebuilding Families Illg said he has found success helping parents recover from meth addiction, even reuniting families that had once been torn apart by the drug. "What I'm finding is that by working closely with meth addicts, allowing supervised visitation in the beginning and helping them to get into a recovery program, I have a number of success stories because we can increase contact," he said. "They will have relapses now and then, but they are reporting them themselves. We are able to build a good program around them that isn't all punitive." He said meth users have been much more successful if they are allowed to see their children because they have a reward to work toward -- being with them as a parent once more. However, that reward works only if the parent wants to reunite with their children, and he said some unfortunately don't. Pure numbers support the relative success of therapy with Iowa's drug users. According to the 2004 Iowa Department of Public Health outcomes monitoring system report, 65.5 percent of meth users remain sober six months after they leave treatment -- a higher rate of abstinence than found with both marijuana and alcohol addicts. Janelle Thomosen, director of the Women and Children's Center at Jackson Recovery where Seaton got help for her addiction, said 200 women come through the center's program every year. Most come to live with their children at the center for three months, receiving group and individual therapy as well as participating in group classes on anger management, time management and coping skills. Seventy-five percent of women leave the program successfully reunited with their children, Thomosen said, and 98 percent of those women are sober six months after treatment. "I think the program is more successful than average because of the length of their stay, their children can stay with them and we build strong, lasting relationships with them all," she said. However, getting funding to support the number of counselors, caseworkers and specialists needed to provide such in-depth services to families is difficult, Illg said. "A few salaries would be worth what the state would save by having mom and dad employed and getting them to the point where they don't need food stamps or other assistance," he said. "Throwing money at a problem doesn't solve anything, but if it makes fiscal sense we need to do it." Also, Illg said the social stigma attached to drug use means many addicts trying to stay clean are at best shunned , and at worst trapped into a cycle of recurring abuse. "It's like people's automatic reaction is stay away from that person, they're a bad person," he said. "Let's say there's a mom who needs treatment and is willing, but because of her criminal record she can't get a license to drive herself there three times a week. People would be a little more reluctant to drive her around than someone who needs dialysis for a kidney problem, but they're both diseases that can be helped." Sloan said he's seen too many families come back through the court system for the same addiction that brought them in the first place to have much faith in rehabilitation. "Sometimes I think social workers use the word 'success' in a narrow time frame, but I suppose you can't track some of these things," he said. "It's possible I'm magnifying the problem because I keep seeing some come back weeks, months, years later." But through 16 years of working with parents and children through the court system, Sloan said he's also come to the conclusion that more needs to be done to help addicted parents wean themselves off meth and become productive. "It's difficult to get people to put aside their prejudgements of others. They say why can't you just stop and get yourself educated, that's your responsibility. But they have children and that's where we are -- I'm trying to find a way for this person to provide for the children they gave birth to," he said. "Maybe they deserve it, but do the babies who are born to them deserve it?" "People will say this is a victimless crime, using drugs," he said. "But the victims as I see it are these little tykes who are kind of caught in the outrageous behavior of their parents." Finding A Foundation Seaton said now that she is out of treatment, she wants to get a job to help support Jayson. She'll have to go back to school to earn her GED, and then she'll have to decide exactly what she wants to do for a career -- Seaton said she has never held a job before. "I'm proud of myself for making it this far," she said. "I think I can keep going." She won't find much support from her family in this, she said, because even those to whom she was closest still abuse meth, alcohol or both. "I can't go around them at all," Seaton said. "I want to stay away from them anyway because it's always been nothing but chaos." Most of her former friends are now off-limits, too, because they would most likely influence her to continue using. "Before when I tried to stop, everywhere I went I'd see people I knew. I'd tell them I didn't want to get high and they'd just laugh at me," she said. She said she and Thompson want to get married soon and move to Sioux Falls so they can make a fresh start as a family of their own. "It's hard to stay sober in the town you used in," Thompson said. "We can't really run from our pasts, but we can make life better for our son." But before everything else, Seaton has to fight for Jaden. On Monday, Seaton is planning to attend a hearing to postpone arguments to terminate her parental rights. If her efforts there don't succeed, Oct. 11 is her last day in court -- and the last day she may have legal custody over her daughter. - --- MAP posted-by: Elizabeth Wehrman