Pubdate: Fri, 08 Sep 2006 Source: Edmonton Sun (CN AB) Copyright: 2006, Canoe Limited Partnership. Contact: http://www.canoe.com/NewsStand/EdmontonSun/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/135 Author: Andrew Hanon Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) TEEN CRYSTAL METH ADDICTS GETTING NEW REHAB CENTRE Connie Forbister knows all too well the soul-killing destruction that crystal meth addiction can wreak. Forbister has spent most of her adult life working with youth, particularly native kids. Much of that time has been developing and running drug and alcohol rehab programs for teens. These days she's running Night Wind Treatment Centres, which has a program for teenage girls on a farm near Legal. Night Wind just got the go-ahead cash from the Edmonton Housing Trust Fund to develop a program specifically for teen crystal meth addicts. "We're not scared of crystal meth kids," Forbister says. She's fully aware of the special challenges that this highly addictive, potent drug poses for anyone trying to break free of it. Most drugs don't affect a user's body the way crystal meth, a synthetic form of speed, does. Meth literally alters the way the brain functions, and the effects can last months after an addict has cleaned up. Long after someone has purged the chemical from their system, they can still be prone to wild mood swings, violent outbursts and suicidal depression. It takes a special kind of treatment program to help people escape crystal meth's clutches. And if anyone gets that fact, it's Forbister. Forbister has worked in remote communities in northern Manitoba, Ontario and Alberta, helping kids that most other adults would write off as beyond redemption. For nearly a decade, she crusaded for teen solvent abusers, kids who had sunk so low that they were systematically destroying their brains with gasoline fumes. Often, when kids reach that level of despair, they're considered beyond reach. Sniffers, the conventional wisdom goes, have permanently damaged their cognitive abilities and have little chance of ever being able to reclaim their lives. But in Forbister's experience, sniffers are not beyond repair. A regimen that includes good nutrition, enough exercise and rest, along with appropriate spiritual and emotional counselling, goes a long way toward helping them regain their faculties and become productive members of society - as long as the people running the rehab program are patient and understand what the kids are going through. And so it is with meth addicts. "You have to be kind with them, but you also have to be smart," Forbister says. While the details of Night Wind's new program are still being worked out, the broad strokes will be like this: There will be an intensive detox program. Crack users, for example, can drain the poisons from their bodies within a few days, but crystal meth can stay in the system for weeks. It's often two weeks before a regular sleeping pattern can even be established, never mind dealing with an addict's attention span and mood swings. Once the kids have cleared detox, they'll move on to the regular rehab program, which will include helping them take control of their addiction and participate in intensive emotional therapy. From there, they'll move on to what's known as an aftercare program, which will prepare them for life after rehab, helping them further their education, find employment and develop simple life skills like planning and sticking to a schedule. The program's length is yet to be worked out, but Forbister says it will be tailored to fit each kid's needs. A building near 118 Avenue and 125 Street has already been selected. Forbister isn't worried about neighbours playing the NIMBY (not in my backyard) card because it previously housed young offenders. She hopes to have the first kids enter the detox program in January. With a total capacity of 30 kids, it will have upwards of 25 staff running the program, so Forbister's confident there'll be adequate supervision. Ultimately, she says, Night Wind hopes to move to a permanent facility on the outskirts of Edmonton to remove the kids from potential temptations in the city. "Kids," she says, "are so resilient. They can bounce back from just about anything, but you have to give them the support and tools to do that." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom