Pubdate: Fri, 01 Dec 2006 Source: Kentucky Kernel (U of KY Edu) Copyright: 2006sKernel Press, Inc. Contact: http://www.kykernel.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/790 Author: Blake Tyra Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) SEMINAR POINTS OUT FAR-REACHING METH DANGERS Methamphetamine use is not just a drug problem. According to Assistant U.S. Attorney Hydee Hawkins, it's a "national epidemic," affecting otherwise law-abiding Americans and their children, and is the number one drug that law enforcement battles today. This was the focus of an hour-long symposium last night in the Small Ballroom of the Student Center for National Methamphetamine Awareness Day. The day was created after President George W. Bush issued a proclamation earlier in November. "On National Methamphetamine Awareness Day, we underscore the dangers of methamphetamine and reaffirm our collective responsibility to combat all forms of drug abuse," Bush wrote in a statement. Hawkins was the speaker at the event. She has been prosecuting meth cases for 15 years. Three students and eight adults listened to Hawkins as she detailed the physical effects of meth, the basics of meth production and the effects of meth usage and production on children. Sometimes called the "poor man's cocaine," Hawkins said that the effects of meth last for 14 to 16 hours and that the user cannot sleep during that time. She said she has seen many cases of truck drivers using meth because it allows them to drive all night. "I can't think of anything worse than an 18-wheeler on the road with a driver that's under the influence of meth," she said. Because of its potency, 99 percent of users are hooked after their first try, Hawkins said. There are 1.5 million regular meth users in the U.S. with one to two labs being discovered each day. "If you do not stop, if you do not get help, you will die," Hawkins said. In addition to death, meth usage can cause blindness, tooth decay and birth defects as well as many other health complications. Hawkins stressed that meth affects many children. From 2000 to 2005, 15,000 children were removed by law enforcement from homes with meth labs, she said. Many of these children had been exposed to the chemical fumes used in making meth, but the long-term dangers of such exposure are unknown. Kentucky is one of 41 states currently restricting the purchase of pseudoephedrine, a common decongestant in cold medicine and a key ingredient in homemade meth production, by placing the medication behind pharmacy counters. Van Ingram, of the Kentucky Office of Drug Control Policy, expressed doubt over the effectiveness that limiting access to pseudoephedrine is having on meth production. "Folks who make meth won't be put off," he said. At UK, Holly Hopper coordinates the Drug Endangered Child Training Network and is chairwoman of the Kentucky Alliance for Drug Endangered Children. Hopper said that she works with the Colleges of Dentistry, Medicine and Public Health, as well as the Kentucky Public Safety Cabinet to help children affected by meth and other drugs. "We put forth a concerted effort to protect and treat kids," she said. "We are making progress, but there's always more to do." Undeclared freshman Stephanie Kenney was one of the three students who attended the symposium. She said she went for her UK 101 class. "I really liked it," she said. "I didn't know it was just so easy (to make meth)." - --- MAP posted-by: Derek