Pubdate: Mon, 15 Oct 2007 Source: Benton County Daily Record (AR) Copyright: 2007 Community Publishers, Inc. Contact: http://www.recordtimes.com/dailyrecord/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1087 Author: Evie Blad Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) TAKING IT TO THE SILVER SCREEN ROGERS -- Go see a movie at a theater here and you will likely see more than a few previews before the feature starts. In between the warnings to shut off your cell phone and advertisements for local businesses, a campaign to dispel myths about methamphetamine use aims to educate young people about how the drug could change their body and social relationships. Over the last few years, the fight against meth has shifted from the floors of state and national legislative bodies to the minds of middle school and junior-high school students because users have grown younger, said Mike Maloney. " We want them to know that when you do that, you don't become cool anymore, you really do place yourself in a lonely place where a lot of people don't want to be, " he said. Maloney, president of Maloney Marketing, serves on the Benton County Methamphetamine Awareness Task Force, a branch of Drug-Free Rogers Lowell. This month is the group's fourth annual Methamphetamine Awareness Month, when Maloney will launch a series of ads as part of an awareness campaign targeted at students. In Benton County, 8. 23 percent of high-school seniors reported using meth, compared to 5. 02 percent statewide, according to the 2006 Arkansas Prevention Needs Assessment Survey, which surveyed 3, 696 youth in the county about their drug-use habits and risk factors for abuse. The survey showed that 0. 8 percent of county sixth graders reported using meth, the same as the statewide figure, while 3. 22 percent of county eighth graders reported using the drug, larger than the 1. 93 percent statewide figure. Compared to other drugs, reports of meth use are relatively low, but steadily growing. In 2005, only 5. 9 percent of seniors had reported using meth, a figure that leaped several percentage points in 2006. Still, other drugs are more prominent. In 2006, for example, 71. 97 percent of high-school seniors reported alcohol use, and 38. 21 percent reported marijuana use. Still meth, which was often associated with low-income, middle-aged adults in the past, is gaining a following among younger users, Maloney said. Original anti-meth efforts in the county were ahead of their time, he said, encouraging legislatures to support efforts to put nonprescription drugs used in meth production behind the counter to restrict their use. Law enforcement now deals with fewer home-spun meth labs, but spends more time combating the import of the drug from south of the border. With the shift of enforcement came a shift in the task force too, Maloney said. " As an organization, we didn't want to let the wind to go out of our sails, " he said. " We really need to get to young people as soon as we possibly can to let them know what the realities of meth use are. " The awareness efforts were aided by a federal grant issued last month. While a majority of the grant will help the Rogers Police Department purchase surveillance equipment to fight the importation of meth, $ 65, 000 will be used to produce the advertising campaign, which Maloney produced. To avoid tired cliches and hollow messages, the group attempted to appeal to an issue close to the heart of young people -- themselves. " We really tried to get into the vanity issues of what you look like if you're a meth user, " Maloney said. The spots, which are in both English and Spanish, focus on how quickly the drug ages users by rotting their teeth and wrinkling their skin and how easy it is to become addicted to the substance. " Young people will have a little bit more of an in-yourface experience with it in an entertaining way, " he said. " There's no reason to try to sugar-coat this stuff. Be honest and sincere about what you're trying to tell people, and it comes through. " The spots follow the lead of other successful awareness campaigns from middle American states. The Montana Meth Project implements, " saturation-level advertising, " reaching 70 percent to 90 percent of the state's teens three times a week as the largest single advertiser in the state, according to the group's Web site, www. montanameth. org. The Montana print, radio and television ads focus on the theme " Not Even Once. " They've proved successful in lowering teen use rates by featuring graphic, grayed out photos and footage with heavy natural light and a rough typeface baring brutal messages. One print piece shows a young couple with the message " My girlfriend would do anything for me -- so I made her sell her body. " In another, a young woman wearing only a bra claws at the skin on her back, a common occurrence for meth abusers who hallucinate about bugs crawling under the surface of their skin. The text reads: " Scabs, hallucinations and body sores. Then things really get bad. " The campaign seems to be working. Meth use by teens in Montana has been reduced by half since the spots were launched in 2005, while the rates have remained the same in the rest of the country, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said. The Benton County task force hopes a similar approach will succeed locally to lower the statistics of use in the area. After several hour-long focus groups, Maloney determined that the same old educational techniques wouldn't work anymore. Young people are relational, and their own encounters with the ill effects of drug use will convince them more than any cliche ever will, he said. " When they talk to each other, they talk very intelligently about social issues, and they do not talk with the cliches, " Maloney said. " They all know someone who has been there, and they can relate to that. No one is purely innocent anymore. " - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom