Pubdate: Fri, 12 May 2006 Source: Maple Ridge Times (CN BC) Copyright: 2006 Lower Mainland Publishing Group Inc Contact: http://www.mrtimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1372 Author: Danna Johnson Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?241 (Methamphetamine - Canada) METH ADDICTS HAVE NURSES ON EDGE Nurses are scared. The number of people presenting in hospital emergency rooms with violent drug-induced psychosis is on the upswing says Linda Pipe. And it's only a matter of time before tragedy results. Crystal meth, said the Fraser Valley representative of the B.C. Nurses Union, is unlike any drug emergency room nurses have had to cope with. And emergency rooms, she said, aren't equipped to deal with these violent addicts. "Nurses are very frustrated, and it's very concerning to them because of the violence associated with these types of patients," she said on Thursday. Patients come in "in a paranoid, delusional state" and require "four-point harnesses," she said. Once admitted, those patients are sedated for 24-hours, which typically gives them enough time to come down off the drug. And in that time, Pipe said, they typically have to stay in the ER, as the psychiatric ward won't admit a patient that is still high. Nurses are required to check on the sedated patient every 15 minutes throughout their stay. "There's no appropriate place for them to go," she said. "If they're lucky they have a family who cares." While drug addicts have been presenting at local emergency rooms since emergency rooms began, Pipe said crystal meth is different and her colleagues have serious concerns about their own safety as a result. "It's not appropriate to keep them in the ER ... This drug induces more violence," she said. Most times, those patients come into the ER with either a paramedic or an RCMP escort. What that means is that not only are they taking up precious space in emergency departments while they're coming down from their high, but they're also taking up RCMP resources. Cpl. Gord Brownridge of the Ridge Meadows RCMP said that's long been the case. Whenever an officer apprehends someone who is in the throws of drug-induced psychosis, the officer is obligated to escort them to the local hospital, and, until they are admitted, must wait with them. "We have to be able to turn the person over to one of the medical staff that's going to take care of them," Brownridge said. "We wouldn't just leave somebody there," he explained. "It is simply the case that somebody has to be responsible for a person if they're unable to take care of themselves." Brownridge said this type of scenario isn't new, but it is problematic. "Any time we're called off the road to deal with something it's a concern, but it's also part of our job. "We're making it work, and just like everything else, we're trying to be as efficient as we can." The chairwoman of the local Crystal Meth Task Force said the local drug problem doesn't show signs of abating. According to Mary Robson, a year ago, there might have been one or two patients presenting at the Ridge Meadows Emergency Room with drug induced psychosis every week. "Now, I'm told, we're getting five or six a day." Earlier this week, Maple Ridge-Mission MLA Randy Hawes told the TIMES that he had been in contact with Solicitor General John Les about finding a solution to the rising number of meth-affected patients in local emergency rooms. Hawes said there is a need for a "holding place for people that are in drug psychosis and considered dangerous." - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin