Pubdate: Mon, 07 Feb 2005 Source: Observer, The (CN SN) Copyright: 2005 Carlyle Observer Contact: http://www.carlyleobserver.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2915 Author: Dawn M. Barker Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) CRYSTAL METH TOUGH TO BREAK AWAY FROM If you knew that a drug would cause irreparable damage to your health, would impact the lives of your friends and family in the worst way, would cost you your job, your assets, your reputation and end your career, why would you even think of taking it? That was the question posed to Harry Ohrn, an addictions counselor located in Estevan, during a recent interview. Ohrn said that the risks of the drug far outweigh the benefits, when considered by a person who has never taken the drug, but once it is used, one's point of view can be changed drastically. "The answer to that is that the high produced far exceeds any high that a person will ever obtain naturally," he said. "The drug changes the way brain chemicals are released into the body and those naturally occurring chemicals that bring us a sense of pleasure are now being released at a much greater level and for a much longer duration, so the person just really has a profound sense of being on top of everything, and that everything is going right in the world. "Take the drug away, and now you are only 'normal'. But because you have experienced this sense of pleasure, this sense of omnipotence, this sense of overwhelming satisfaction, 'normal' seems like depression. You can never, ever attain that high that you had without doing it synthetically. You can never obtain that naturally. Skydiving isn't going to do it for you. Thrill seeking, meditation -- they're never going to do it for you. "You're never going to be able to get there unless you take that drug again, so people being as they are -- we're essentially pleasure seekers, that's how we're created. We gravitate toward pleasure and we avoid pain. That's part of our human nature, so once we've stimulated that part of our brain, and we can't get that any other way, we're going to want to do it again, and again, and again. Once people are addicted, once they're in that state, it's really hard to get out." Adding to the difficulty of getting people off the drug is the lack of adequate counseling and recovery programs in the province. Whereas withdrawal symptoms (detoxification) last only a couple weeks for cocaine addicts or alcoholics, withdrawal from crystal meth can last up to three months. "When you're coming down from one of these highs, your body is worn out from not sleeping. Typically, withdrawal lasts from one to three months -- and by withdrawal, I mean the physical reaction to the drug not being there anymore," Ohrn said. As with alcohol withdrawals, addicts may feel jittery, and may hallucinate and see things actually not there. Meth addicts, in addition, though, have a tendency toward depression (having altered the chemicals in the brain), and during that depression may encounter and act out on suicidal thoughts. "If you used it long enough, you may have depleted certain brain chemicals like dopamine for example that give us all a sense of feeling good and pleasurable sensations in our bodies," Ohrn explained. "If you win something and you get a pleasurable rush, that is because of how this dopamine works. But if you've depleted that chemical -- you're never going to have the high again because you're not going to take the drug, plus you most likely have depleted the brain chemicals that give us a natural state of mind. It's sort of a double whammy. People are going to have a sense of 'blah', a sense of depression. Months, even years later, they could still have no feelings of pleasure, and that's one of the most difficult things we have to deal with, with these people, is that without the drug they may never truly have joy in their life. That's the challenge." A first, and essential, step is for addicts to work through their love/hate relationship with the drug. Ohrn said that most people who come in for counseling do so of their own volition, and recognize that it is destroying their life, but at the same time they are so desperately addicted that they can't envision life without meth. To make a break from the drug, addicts must work actively to withdraw from the lifestyle they created during the drug use. "In some cases the only social interaction they have is with other drug users; they may have engaged in criminal activities that have got them in trouble with the law; they may certainly have squandered all their resources so they really don't have anywhere to live; or the resources to feed themselves properly. Malnourishment is also a problem," Ohrn said. "So when we're dealing with an individual who has been on methamphetamines we're going to take it pretty seriously. This is somebody who's very ill." Most detox programs take only people after they have been off the drug for 14 days. "Well, you've got somebody here who may be experiencing some difficulty for two months, so they wouldn't qualify to enter detox. We don't have a lot of really good pharmacological approaches to managing this, either," Ohrn said. "One of the things that has been administered is an anti-psychotic called Haldol. Haldol is usually administered to someone that has some pretty serious psychiatric problems... but it may not be appropriate or useful for the long term, because it's got its own side effects." Someone being treated for alcohol addiction may be ready after two weeks of sobriety to deal with the stringent aspects of detox, like getting up early, doing assignments, or talking about the addiction. "Somebody who is getting off crystal meth after two months is in and out of their chair. They can't sit still, they have trouble with focus, they can't concentrate on assignments -- they'll read the first three lines and then they'll drift off. They'll read a few pages and can't remember what they read... all that sort of stuff is going on, and it's a real struggle, so often what's happening is that they'll opt out of treatment, and what do they do then? They go back to using it." Overall, Ohrn paints a somewhat grim picture of the level of success for people who have become dependant on crystal meth. "They have to have a strong desire to get well, have to be quite willing to comply with recommendations and have a full body work-up for the most part, with reestablishment of the diet and learning skills to cope with irritability, agitation and depression and so on." One of the only treatment centres in Saskatchewan which has developed a program to accommodate crystal meth addicts is Pine Lodge at Indian Head. "There have been a lot of cases in the P.A. area, and smaller areas around there -- Nipawin and so on. There are fairly significant numbers of cases in the larger centres, Regina and Saskatoon," Ohrn said. "This has come in during the past year and a half or so in a big way. So the treatment programs aren't designed to deal with the severity and challenge of the problems those people have." Labs have been discovered in North Dakota, and although no labs have been found in the southeast corner of the province yet, there have been thefts of anhydrous ammonia from farmyards and from Luscar. Anhydrous ammonia is one of the ingredients which can be used in the production of meth. Anecdotal information passed along to the police also indicates the presence of the drug. The drug can be made in a very limited amount of space, like a footlocker which can be hidden under the bed, or in a car trunk. Ohrn said it doesn't take a lot of specialized equipment to make, just a hot plate or source of heat, buckets, a tank of anhydrous and the chemicals. "It looks to most people like a still," Ohrn said, noting that a batch of the drug is very quick to produce, taking only three to five hours. Of course, the danger with crystal meth isn't limited to the user. The different methods of making it vary in volatility. Some can result in the creation of yellow phosphorus instead of red phosphorus. Yellow phosphorus explodes on contact with the air. When combined with other ingredients which may be used in the making of the drug, including the corrosive (batteries and acids) and the explosive (ether), it can pose a very lethal problem. "Most labs are found after the fire, so you've got property damage and hazardous material from manufacturing this stuff, and you have to dump the toxic chemicals some place," he said. "The focus isn't on responsibly handling the hazardous material produced -- it's on the high that can be achieved as soon as the drug is produced." He added that toxic and corrosive chemicals are poured down the drains, where it pollutes the environment and could potentially affect groundwater. Police estimate that for every pound of the drug created, at least five pounds of toxic byproducts are also made. "In the manufacturing of it you are trying to extract a methamphetamine out of ephedrine for the most part, so you're not really adding anything. Say you've got 10 or 15 packages of [over the counter medication containing ephedrine] -- that's what you're going to get the methamphetamine out of. All the other stuff, the hydrochloric acid, the iodine, the phosphorus if you're using that approach, all those kinds of things are just a means to an end. All those things have got to be dumped somewhere. It's easy to see how that could end up as a five to one ratio, if not more." With all the hazardous material left in the open, it's extremely toxic for people to go into the sites where meth is being made. "During a recent presentation on the drug, one of our EMT guys gave a presentation on what they're allowed to do. If they get a 9-1-1 call and they go in and a guy's having a heart attack in a meth lab, they just leave the heart attack patient on the floor and they leave," Ohrn said. Officers and health workers are very concerned with children living in the meth lab homes, or living with meth addicts. "Because if you're staying awake for 21 or 28 days and not looking after yourself, how much care can you possibly be giving your one year old, or your five year old or 10 year old? If you're cooking this stuff up in your house, what do you think is happening to your child?" Ohrn asked. "Some of the vapours produced are heavier than air, and they'll be collecting closer to the ground where your child is crawling around. If you take a look at some of these houses where the stuff is being cooked, and people aren't taking care of their homes... You've got homes that are just in squalor, you have inadequate resources, you aren't able to take care of yourself and you aren't taking care of your children. "It's not pretty, and I've seen the people who are on this stuff, and they're not well. I have no doubt that they are in for a long haul. "It's not a good thing. I don't see anything really positive about this drug," emphasized Ohrn. "If you're looking at it from a harm reduction standpoint, I'd say do anything but meth, with the exception of crack cocaine. Have some pot. Smoke a joint. Whatever. But don't do this stuff. It's nasty." - --- MAP posted-by: Derek