Pubdate: Wed, 02 Mar 2005 Source: Esquimalt News (CN BC) Copyright: 2005 Esquimalt News Contact: http://www.esquimaltnews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1290 Author: Vern Faulkner Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) ADDICTIVE DRUG IS CHEAP, EASILY MADE FORUM EXPOSED DANGERS OF CRYSTAL METH Approximately 200 people flocked to the Esquimalt Recreation Centre to learn more about the perils of crystal meth. It isn't a pretty world, said presenter Chris Goble, a key worker with the Victoria Youth Empowerment Society and coordinator of Specialized Youth Detox. While he stopped short of calling crystal meth a growing epidemic, he noted crystal meth as the drug of choice for a vast preponderance of youths coming in for detox. In 2001, a mere 11 per cent of detox clients used the drug - in 2003-04, that shifted to 62 per cent. "The other thing that's shifted is that in 2001, it was 75-per-cent male, in 2003 its 65-per-cent female," Goble said, noting increased use among younger teens. The increased use in young women apparently stems from a desire to lose weight. "There's this myth that they can lose 20-30 pounds, then quit. They can lose the weight, because they're not eating and not sleeping - but by the time they lose the weight, they've got a full-blown addiction." It's a tragic fall-out from societal pressures, said Goble. "Women are supposed to have a certain body type - but most don't fit that body type." For that reason alone, crystal meth use transcends demographics: it's just as likely to be used by the private-schooled daughter of a wealthy family as a child in a middle-income or poverty-stricken home. Parents should look for the use of traditional "gateway" or experimental drugs - tobacco, alcohol, and marijuana - as warning signs. "We don't get a lot of kids saying that they're 14 and crystal meth is the first drug they've tried." Further, said Goble, there's no such thing as recreational crystal meth use. "You can recreationally use alcohol and marijuana... I've never heard that with crystal meth." Users "either quit and don't like it, won't ever use it gain, or that becomes their drug of choice and that's all they'll use." The drug - a stimulant - is powerfully addictive, and in many ways desirable because it is easily made, affordable, and provides a long-term "high" for relatively little cost. A $10-$15 "point" keeps a user high for two to five hours, whereas a similar dose of cocaine would only keep a user high for about 30 minutes," said Goble. A former addict recently related her tale to an affiliated newspaper in the interior, in hopes others would not fall into the meth trap. "Meth actually changes the way you think," she said. Even after five years going clean, certain scents, lighting, or other stimuli still trigger her craving for the drug. "I was raising a family, working full time, working nights, active in many community groups such as PAC, Block Parent programs, and more," said the woman. "I was trying to be super mom and crystal meth had me believing I was." Victoria police Insp. Gord Gummer noted little complexity to the manufacture of crystal meth. That said, meth labs pose many risks due to volatility and toxicity of the ingredients. If police witness growing meth use in Esquimalt, that's only the sign of a trend "in all communities," Gummer noted, though there's not a great problem in this community. Education - prevention - are the greatest tools, ensuring that people simply don't try the drug. "One or two consumptions, and you can be addicted," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek