Pubdate: Sun, 23 Oct 2005 Source: Frontiersman, The (Wasilla, AK) Copyright: 2005 Wick Communications Contact: http://www.frontiersman.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1532 Author: Mary Ames Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) KIDS PAYING PRICE IN METH EPIDEMIC State Averaging 40 Reports A Month Mat-Su - The recent busts of three meth labs in the Butte removed two toddlers and a 6-year-old from harm's way. But those children aren't the only ones in danger in the Valley. From July 2004 through June 2005, the state Office of Children's Services received an average of 40 protective-service reports a month that were connected to methamphetamine in some way, according to James Steele, manager for the Southcentral region. Some reports were about children whose parents who were using the drug, some had parents who were manufacturing it, Steele said. "We had eight reports of children living in active meth labs," he said. "We proved to the courts that 10 children were in danger in the labs. If you think in terms of child development, at a certain age, everything goes in the mouth. There's a full gamut of toxic substances in meth labs - oxidizers, poisons, corrosives. And they're not rocket scientists who are mixing these chemicals." The Valley's Drug-Endangered Children's Task Force formed a couple of years ago to address the physical and mental problems of children raised in meth labs. The task force includes people from several agencies that provide care for the children, either on scene or later, such as the Alaska Bureau of Investigation, the Mat-Su Borough's emergency services department, the OCS and hospital staff, according to Steele. Right now, the task force is reviewing its response plan for meth lab children. "With all these different agencies involved, we get lots of community perspective," Steele said. "Obviously a drug environment isn't good," said Jen Downey, executive director of The Children's Place in Wasilla. "But in these places, the walls, the furniture, carpet and clothes get saturated with the chemicals and fumes." The toxins in meth labs can be absorbed through the skin, Downey said. "Think of the crawlers," she said, "the babies on the carpet on their hands and knees. And then those hands go in their mouths, too." Alaska meth cooks generally use the red phosphorus method of making the drug. According to the Alaska Department of Environmental Conservation, wastes generated from this meth-cooking technique include flammable extraction-process sludge, phosphine gas, iodine, hydriodic acid, hydrogen chloride gas, phosphoric acid and yellow or white phosphorus. None of these chemicals or gases are active ingredients in the final product. Meth's only active ingredient is ephedrine. All the other chemicals used are there to convert and crystallize the ephedrine into a usable product. Pure ephedrine is actually extremely dangerous; in its pure form, it is a controlled substance. Converting ephedrine to methamphetamine produces volatile and toxic chemical waste. A 2003 study of chemical exposures at meth labs conducted by Dr. Jefferey Burgess at the University of Washington stated that the persistence of iodine in the environment of the cook, "is very important to the children that are present in clandestine laboratories as well as children who inadvertently become residents in a building previously used as a methamphetamine laboratory. Children crawling on contaminated carpet may pick up high levels of iodine." Aside from waste chemicals produced from cooking, meth contamination was found in every one of the 16 buildings tested in the study, all of which housed meth labs at some point. "Even labs that had been busted several months prior to testing still had contamination levels of methamphetamine present on many surfaces within the building," the report stated. In one controlled meth cook, researchers placed a teddy bear 12 inches from the cook area and afterward checked the bear's pH level and tested the bear's "fur" for meth contamination. The teddy bear had an extremely acidic pH of 1, and was highly contaminated with meth. According to the study, "Children playing with such toys may be exposed to strong acids contained within the toy, causing severe burns to the skin and mucus membranes, and also be exposed to significant concentrations of methamphetamine - particularly if the toy is placed in the mouth." Because the meth scourge is a relatively recent phenomenon, studies on long-term damage are incomplete, according to Downey. But it is known that damage to the children includes brain damage. When the Mat-Su Narcotics Team plans a bust and suspects children are involved, its members tell the OCS in advance, so the agency is on alert, according to Steele. "If the child has difficulty breathing or is lethargic, they get EMS involved and our people meet them at the hospital," Steele said. "If the exposure is lower, if the materials are there but there's no meth cooking, maybe the kid's clothing needs to be removed and the kid put in a hazmat suit. We get them a medical evaluation as soon as possible after that." So far, 170 people have registered for a Drug-Endangered Children's Conference that will be held at the Best Western Lake Lucille Inn in Wasilla on Monday and Tuesday. National experts will be speaking about national standards dealing with children raised in meth labs. "The intent of the conference is to provide and assist in response protocols," Steele said. "We need to make the public more aware of how much kids are affected by being in meth labs. These kids have no choice about being there." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom