Pubdate: Sun, 02 Jul 2006 Source: Reno Gazette-Journal (NV) Copyright: 2006 Reno Gazette-Journal Contact: http://www.rgj.com/helpdesk/news/letter-to-editor.php Website: http://www.rgj.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/363 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) ANTI-METH HELP NEEDED Topic: Meth epidemic Our View: Combating the phenomenon is a community project that calls for additional resources. Methamphetamine addiction is an epidemic that is ravaging our cities, our rural areas and our nation. It is a disease that everyone wants to cure, but hardly anyone fully knows how. Our tentative first steps involve a complex set of social-psychological, medical, legal and economic strategies. Getting well is a community project that requires more resources than are currently being invested. Some are trying. Law enforcement agencies, of course. And treatment facilities set up to manage drug and alcohol addictions. Quest Counseling and Bristlecone Family Resources in Reno, Vitality Center in Elko, the Partnership Carson City Anti-Meth Coalition in the state's capital and the new Meth Community Response Alliance are soliciting the full force of community resources to combat this scourge. Contacting any of them can turn a person back toward a normal, fulfilling, human existence. This society and this community can ill afford to ignore them. Characterizing the meth phenomenon as a "disease," a "scourge" and a "ravaging epidemic" invites criticism that the media is exaggerating the situation. It is arguable that the largely ineffective war on drugs jaded and blinded the public to abuse of this particular substance until it was too late. The situation has been nearly 40 years in the making. Talk intended to warn young people, especially, away from chemicals that suffuse the brain's pleasure centers and could increase curiosity and lure people with personality problems. How else would anyone be tempted to ingest a substance that destroys the natural beauty of the human being? The alliance and other groups are addressing this one by asking kids to help design effective campaigns. A Carson City youth produced a film. The critiques may come close to truth. But understand this: The seriousness of the meth phenomenon is no exaggeration. It is no myth. What makes it hard to eradicate is the force and tenacity with which it takes hold. It is a lifestyle supported by relationships -- and of course, the drug. The RGJ's special report "Meth: Shattered Lives in Northern Nevada," the result of a three-month inquiry that was published June 25, has the facts: Meth addiction is no respecter of age, race, class or profession. College presidents, business people and substance abuse counselors were caught in its web. Ten percent of Washoe County high school students said last year they'd tried the drug; 5 percent of middle school kids did, too. Also, 15 percent of all admissions into treatment centers funded by the state were juveniles. It's a parent's worst nightmare. There's a problem with the numbers. They represent only the cases we know about, people who already are in trouble with the drug and the justice system, who commit crimes to support their cravings. There are others we know nothing about. The drug is so damaging that users no longer respond humanly. But meth addicts are our children, siblings, parents and neighbors. It wouldn't do to turn our backs or to stand by helplessly. Those with the worst problems are what the best of us could become if circumstances were different. Their grief and ours is a quality of life indicator. The window of opportunity is small for those who seek help on their own. Unless help is immediately available, we risk returning users to the streets and the drug. It can take six months to a year before a user in recovery can understand what has happened. It can take many more months to relearn the value of family, how to hold a job and to enjoy the sun or the breeze at lakeside. The ratio of treatment beds to willing patients, however, is inadequate, meanwhile funding for services is drying up. Mental health providers and community-based advocates have joined with lawmakers, court officials and law enforcement officials to pin down a strategy that asks the community's help. Helping them helps all of us to take ownership of the problem and responsibility for solving it. Arrests take users and dealers off the street and can be a wake-up call for the willing. They are a partial solution. Effective strategies need community, legislative and budgetary support that includes education, timely treatment that is long enough to restore cognition and to modify behavior. The principle of supply and demand is practical. Reduce demand to reduce supply, which cuts demand. Think of the meth epidemic as a terrorist threat that requires a comprehensive and proactive defense in terms of funding, staffing, education and treatment. Think of it when lawmakers ask for legislative and popular support for programs and when community leaders ask for cooperation and for dollars. We need your help. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman