Pubdate: Sat, 26 Feb 2005 Source: Saturday Okanagan, The (CN BC) Copyright: 2005 Saturday Okanagan Contact: http://www.kelownadailycourier.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1206 Author: Chuck Poulsen, The Okanagan Saturday Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) GET USED TO METH MADNESS Problem Of Crystal Meth Use Is Here To Stay, Will Worsen, Conference Told Anyone who thinks the crystal meth problem is going to get better is hallucinating. A conference was told Friday that meth in its current reincarnation has been on the streets for only five years. It's an infant of a drug that will grow into an even bigger monster "Is it going to get worse? For sure," said Bob Hughes, an addiction counsellor from the Phoenix Centre in Kamloops. "It's only been five years, and it's already come out of the fringes and gone into the mainstream. "Use is going to increase. Will it become an epidemic? I doubt it, but it's here to stay. We'll just have another drug to add to the cornucopia of dangerous substances." Meth is attractive to teens because it's cheap and easy to get. It's a drug they can do in the morning, and its effects will last all day long Hughes says it can wreak even more havoc than crack cocaine. "It's being used primarily by younger and younger crowds," said Hughes. "It's similar to crack cocaine in terms of addiction. "But with meth, we see people coming in and they're psychotic. That's significant. The propensity for violence and aggression with meth is unique. We haven't got the message out to youth that crystal meth does enormous damage." Two-thirds of street people use meth. Hughes explained the psychosis it can create in addicts by citing one user who was hallucinating even two months after he had stopped using. "After two months, one individual told me he still saw shadow people," said Hughes. "He would be walking down the street, and he still had feelings that there might be someone on the other side of a parked car that was running along with him. He'd go out in the road to see if there was anybody there." Hughes said parents should watch for any dramatic changes in behaviour in their kids, such as a shift away from being engaged in activities such as sports or academics. If you're seeing a drop in those healthy activities, that might be a warning sign, said Hughes. "If a teenager is up before you are and busy and active -- well, we know that teenagers tend not to want to get up in the morning," said Hughes. "Weight loss is a very significant symptom. Also, you will see a breakdown in the skin where they're getting sores on the edges of their hair line and they're picking away at them." He said parents should also look for rapid speech and dilated pupils. "After they use the drug for a period of time, they crash," said Hughes. "They're sleeping for many, many days, and you can't seem to wake them up. So you'll see a pattern of binge use and then drop-off." Hughes says the first level of help is from the parents. "Don't be demanding or you are going to have a defensive child. Devote some time engaging your child in a non-intrusive way. "Then access some support for yourself. Fear can be mobilizing for a parents, but it can make you do things that you're going to regret later. In terms of trying to control your child, that pushes him further away. "There are services out there, whether it's calling a friend, the Ministry of Children and Families or addiction service providers." He said there has been little research in B.C. -- and none in Kelowna - -- on the amount of use. "In Kelowna, I don't think there are any statistics about who is using the drug," he said. "I'm very hopeful we're going to get some resources to determine where the drug is and what level of use is out there." Hughes said there is also an increase in babies being born to meth-using mothers who face withdrawal as soon they enter the world. The baby crashes and becomes irritable and has a hard time adjusting to stimulation. People or babies coming off the drug have an inability to handle stimulation, such as bright lights. Meth babies also tend to be smaller and premature because of a lack of nutrition. Hughes said there needs to be some fundamental changes in Canada to deal with the meth problem. "Unlike our American counterparts, we in Canada have very limited powers to control the behaviour of adolescents," says Hughes. "Changes in the Youth Justice Act have resulted in less control and thus fewer consequences for destructive, anti-social behaviour. "As well, a crumbling health-care system has offered few resources to tackle the psychiatric and cognitive damage done by this drug. Such factors have created a ripe situation for this drug to create enormous social damage to our families, communities and the future of our youth." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin