Pubdate: Mon, 16 Jan 2006 Source: Maclean's Magazine (Canada) Copyright: 2006 Maclean Hunter Publishing Ltd. Contact: http://www.macleans.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/253 Author: Nora Underwood Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/testing.htm (Drug Test) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mdma.htm (Ecstasy) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hallucinogens.htm (Hallucinogens) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) TOUCHED BY DRUGS Wiping a Keyboard or Other Surface Can Now Tell Parents and Employers If the User Is, Well, a User Early last year Kelly Merriman, the then-33-year-old daughter of Saskatoon MLA Ted Merriman, went public about her struggle with crystal meth, a highly addictive street form of methamphetamine, or speed. The woman had had lots of experience with various drugs -- coke, LSD, ecstasy -- but crystal meth quickly pulled her down and nearly killed her. By the time she went into recovery, she'd lost 45 lb. in two months, had suffered liver damage and was living on chocolate milk. Her coming out was not only brave, but it also put a face on Saskatchewan's increasingly worrisome drug problem -- one the provincial government has been actively grappling with since 1998. According to a 2004 study, crystal meth use among respondents in the province was six per cent for 12- to 14-year-olds, 20 per cent among the 15-to-18 group, and 48 per cent for 19- to 24-year-olds. So it's hardly a surprise that a drug-detection technology used by U.S. Customs and the FBI had its Canadian launch in Saskatchewan for workplace and home use. Called DrugWipe, the product can detect minute amounts of drugs -- as little as 2.5 nanograms -- on almost any surface, as well as on people. Analysis of the wipes can also identify the drug as amphetamine, cocaine, marijuana or opiate. Originally developed in Germany as a non-invasive way for law-enforcement agents to check for drugs, DrugWipe is now being marketed to employers and parents. "Companies would say to us, 'We have to have a drug-free workplace,' but human rights legislation prevents us from doing drug testing," says Dennis Birtles, spokesman for the company Investigations Canada and CEO of Evident Corporate Investigations in Saskatoon. With DrugWipe, he adds, "you're not necessarily testing the actual employee but surfaces owned by the company that employees touch -- keyboards, mouses, steering wheels, forklift controls. It will tell an employer we found traces of cannabis on this area and cocaine on the loading dock so the employee himself is somewhat protected." For kids, though, it's a different story. For $250, Birtles' company -- six others across Canada will soon be offering the same service -- sends people out to wipe down areas of a child's room, including computers and joysticks. The sample is taken back to a lab and technicians identify any drugs that are detected. "We go back, talk to the parents, say 'This is what we found; this is where we found it,' " Birtles explains. The company puts the parents in touch with a drug counsellor. "Some parents gravitate right away to the counselling route; others want to deal with it themselves." Birtles sought legal advice on the implications of the drug-detection technology, as children clearly don't have the same protection of their rights and privacy as employees. "In Saskatchewan, it's parents that control the home, and if their children are under 15 we can test their bedrooms," he says. In addition, with a second tool called PreScreen5, children under 16 can themselves be tested with a wipe to the forehead, palms and fingertips. "Parents have been sneaking into kids' rooms for years and listening in to phone calls," Birtles adds. "Children tend to tell parents what they think parents want to hear, not want they need to know." In the case of drug use -- particularly drugs like crystal meth -- it's a question of life and death, he says. "Do you want to sneak around or do you want to go to their funeral?" While the detection tool provides parents with the information they want -- and may, in some cases, alleviate long-held fears -- some see it as a slippery slope. "The kids will just become better at being deceptive," says David Wolfe, RBC chair in children's mental health at the Centre for Addiction and Mental Health and a professor of psychiatry and psychology at the University of Toronto. "They'll simply go off-site." The bigger issue, he adds, is really one of principle. "Is this really the way to approach this? Once you move into that, you're in a competition with adolescents. And the lack of trust will really escalate. It's a desperate measure for desperate people." Instead, Wolfe says, concerned parents should talk to their kids and deal with the issue of drugs in the broader community -- with the school principal about policies, with other parents about monitoring. "The issue of crystal meth is a tough one," he adds, "because it really is a serious problem. It's an adult issue, not just a teen issue. It's our responsibility to try to eliminate the problem, not just catch them doing it." Parents have to give their kids scare messages in terms of the harm that drugs can cause, Wolfe contends, "but they also need to give an opportunity for an alternative: what do I do if I run into this stuff? What if I do it and I like it?" Often, encouraging children to talk to another adult they trust -- parents are frequently too emotionally involved -- may make them feel more trusted and responsible. "You can't make them change," Wolfe says. "They have to do it." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake