Pubdate: Tue, 08 May 2007 Source: Sudbury Star (CN ON) Copyright: 2007 The Sudbury Star Contact: http://www.thesudburystar.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/608 Author: Garett Williams PARENTS SEEK HELP TO TAME MONSTERS Health Unit Offers Drug Info Session "He has become a monster." These were words of a parent exhausted from dealing with a son on drugs. On Monday evening, parents converged on the Sudbury and District Health Unit for an S.O.S. -Save Our Sanity - information session discussing current trends in drugs. The health unit, the Greater Sudbury Police Service, MADD Canada and the FOCUS Community Project teamed up to put on the event, which was attended by nearly a dozen parents. The parents in attendance learned the effects of drugs and some of the signs to look for, as well as how to approach their kids if they are using drugs. One mother, who wished to remain unidentified, came looking for help. Her son, in his 20s, has been battling addiction since high school. Currently, he uses cocaine. Despite being unable to hold a job - he has been fired four times in the last 10 months, and losing many of his friends - he refuses to go to rehab and even denies that he uses drugs. According to Sgt. Peter Orsino, head of the joint forces drug unit for Greater Sudbury Police, he won't be willing to accept help until he hits his own rock bottom. His mother, however, holds onto a hope that it won't have to go that far. "I want to bring all the people who are very important in his life, all the people who matter to him, and I want to bring them all to my house and I want us to talk to him and tell him that he needs to go to rehab," she said. Orsino used a Powerpoint presentation to get across the effects of drugs found on the streets of Sudbury - drugs like marijuana, ecstasy, cocaine and the one causing the most trouble in Sudbury, crack. Crack, which is a crystallized version of cocaine that delivers a shorter, but more addictive, high, has moved from the streets and into the hallways at local high schools, Orsino said. In order to continue the expensive habit, students sell to their peers. Brenda Stankiewicz, a public health nurse with the health unit, works with the Sudbury Focus Community Project, which works through partnerships to prevent drug and alcohol abuse. What she hopes to get across to parents, she said, is that the false perception that drug use during the teenage years is something everyone goes through. "There's this perception that its a rite of passage and that all kids experiment," she said. "But the reality is that most kids don't. If only 3.3 per cent of kids have ever tried using OxyContin, that means 97 per cent have not." The health unit and Focus will continue to promote prevention of drug and alcohol abuse around Greater Sudbury, but for the parents with children already in the lower percentile, it's too late for prevention. Their lives have already changed. And what is it like living with a son so deep in his habit he is beyond reach? "It's a nightmare." - --- MAP posted-by: Derek