Pubdate: Thu, 09 Aug 2007 Source: Bay Area Reporter (San Francisco, CA) Copyright: 2007 The Bay Area Reporter Contact: http://www.ebar.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/41 Author: Matthew S. Bajko Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) CITY SAYS METH USE IS AT 'HIGH PLATEAU' The City Hopes To Curb Meth Use Among Gay Men With Its "Resist Meth" Campaign. Despite some data suggesting that methamphetamine use among gay men has declined in recent years, a city panel tasked with addressing what health officials consider "the other epidemic" after HIV maintains that usage remains at a "high plateau." The Mayor's Task Force on Crystal Methamphetamine came to the conclusion in an April consensus report. Little noticed at the time it was issued, the report concluded that 13 percent of the city's estimated 54,000 gay and bisexual male residents use meth. Out of 5,524 gay and bi men who inject drugs, the task force concluded that 54 percent are speed users. Taken together, the numbers suggest that 10,003 gay men in San Francisco are meth users. Overall, the task force estimated that 46,000 residents use meth. The task force came to its decision after reviewing data from a dozen studies, and usage could range anywhere from once a day to once in the past year. "With most drugs you are looking at single digit percentages, not 13 percent," said task force member Michael Siever, Ph.D., manager of the Stonewall Project, a meth-focused substance use program that recently merged with the San Francisco AIDS Foundation. "Crystal has been and continues to be a major issue in San Francisco's gay community. It still remains high, no matter how you slice the numbers." The task force estimated that only 3 percent of gay meth users use the drug on a daily basis, while 73 percent use it once a month or less. Seventeen percent of gay and bi who inject meth do so at least once a day, while 21 percent inject meth once a month or less, concluded the task force. "The conclusion of the consensus meeting was that we are at a high plateau and have been for a while. There are some fluctuations but there is still a very high rate of use even with whatever recent dips there have been," said Siever. "A high plateau means to me meth use has been very significant among gay men and has been for some time." Siever noted though that even if roughly 20 percent of the city's men who have sex with men use meth, 80 percent do not. "The reality is the vast majority of folks don't do drugs, period," said Siever. The task force's conclusion is 3 percentage points higher than data collected by the Stop AIDS Project suggested two years ago. Only 10 percent of the 809 men the agency surveyed in 2005 reported using crystal in the last six months, down from 18 percent of the 1,305 men asked in 2003 as part of the agency's street surveys. A study using Stop AIDS Project data through June 2006, published last month in the Journal of Drug and Alcohol Dependence , reported that overall, the use of methamphetamine was lower in early 2006 compared to late 2003. Usage among HIV-negative MSM dropped from 14.7 to 9 percent, while usage among HIV positive men fell to 19.9 percent last year from 28 percent in late 2003. Even more encouraging is that usage of the drug during sex also declined, said the study. The study's authors, who included Stop AIDS education manager Jennifer Hecht and health department epidemiologists H. Fisher Raymond and Willi McFarland, noted that speed use has been found to be associated with HIV seroconversion and is thought to account for a "large proportion" of infections in San Francisco. The city estimates it will record 800 to 1,000 new HIV infections this year. The number of negative men using speed during sex fell from 11.8 percent in 2003 to 6.6 percent in early 2006. Among positive men, the number fell from 24.8 percent in 2003 to 17.4 percent in early 2006. The study authors also reviewed drug-related visits to San Francisco General Hospital's emergency room. While visits for marijuana, alcohol, cocaine, and ecstasy use all increased, meth-related visits showed a "slight decrease" from the first half of 2004 to early 2006. The numbers dropped from 371 to 299. "The downward trend of methamphetamine use among HIV-negative MSM is particularly noteworthy given the attention that has focused on this issue over the last few years," states the study. The Stonewall Project launched in 1998 and in 2002 its http://www.tweaker.org Web site debuted. In 2005 Stop AIDS launched its own "Crystal Clear" campaign, and in April that year Mayor Gavin Newsom formed his crystal task force at the urging of Supervisor Bevan Dufty, who held several hearings at City Hall on the drug's impact. "While our data do not prove that the intensified prevention efforts are causing a decrease in methamphetamine use, they are encouraging and merit confirmation in other data," conclude the study's authors. The authors are currently crunching data collected over the last 12 months to see if meth use has continued to decline. According to the health department's July monthly STD report, meth-related hospital visits for men through June of 2007 numbered 213, down from 245 during the same period last year. Steven Tierney, a co-chair of the task force and deputy director of programs at SFAF, said despite the consensus report's conclusions, he remains optimistic about the course of the city's meth epidemic. "The news is good. Meth use appears to be continuing to go down," said Tierney, who said more data is needed though to confirm the trend. "Before people get all excited about meth, we need to do a little more investigation of what we are discovering." Studies have found that cocaine use among gay men is on the rise in San Francisco, suggesting that meth has lost some of its cachet as a fun party drug. According to McFarland, cocaine was slightly up, but statistically level from the second half of 2003 through the first half of 2006. Usage went from 13.6 percent in 2003 to 14.5 percent last year. While cocaine use has not been tied to unsafe sex and HIV infections, as has speed, Tierney said he is still concerned that cocaine may impair people's judgment. "The impact of cocaine on sexual risk would be in the same school as alcohol. If a person has a safety plan for himself around sexual behavior, sometimes you are not in the same capacity to stick to your plan. So that is the situation," he said. City urges resistance to meth The city's latest effort to reduce crystal use is an ad campaign and Web site urging gay men to "Resist Meth." An outgrowth of the task force's recommendations, the campaign uses stark black, red and white imagery recalling Soviet-era poster realism. The message is intended to reach not only meth users struggling to quit the drug, but also those gay men who have never tried it but may find themselves in a situation where they are offered the drug. Since its unveiling in June, more than 5,355 people have visited http://www.resistmeth.org and 75 people have "joined the resistance" at the online site. The health department is spending $195,000 on the campaign, which also includes the translation of tweaker.org into Spanish. "Meth has actually created a little bit of a front for a lot of us to come together and join forces. It was saying going back to the concept of community. We the people come together and want you to join us to resist this thing," said Antonio Aquilar, a gay Latino man who was a member of the campaign's community advisory group. Aquilar, 40, has spent the last two years working with gay Latino meth users through a project sponsored by the Cesar Chavez Institute at San Francisco State University. He said the advisory group members all had various points of view on the need for another meth campaign. "My hope was just start the dialogue. With gay Latino men there is no language to talk about it. So much stigma, fear, and misinformation," said Aquilar. "The sign doesn't say anything stigmatizing about anyone or anything. It leaves it open so people can read into it whatever they want." In addition to the ads and posters, 40,000 pamphlets called a "methifesto" and duplicating the Web site's message have been distributed. Under the heading "Resistance is not futile," the campaign proclaims that "Meth doesn't have to be part of being gay. It doesn't have to be a rite of passage." At the same time the campaign acknowledges that some gay men "can use meth occasionally without it becoming a problem." It includes advice for meth users on how to protect themselves from STDs and HIV - one suggestion for men who bottom tells them to insert a female condom in their rectum prior to getting high on the drug. It also advises HIV-positive men to be honest about their meth use with their doctors because crystal can cause negative interactions with HIV medications. The site also debunks myths that meth increases T-cells or boosts users' immune systems. Tracey Packer, the city's interim HIV prevention director, said the campaign purposefully tries not to sound preachy so it will not be dismissed. "We need to be realistic about people's behaviors and give them the information they need to reduce their risk," she said. "If you don't speak to people within the reality they live in they won't listen." She also said the campaign is not meant to compete with other efforts already being undertaken in the city. "The most effective messages are delivered in lots of different ways," she said. "It is not meant to compete but to complement." Packer said the Resist Meth message seems to be resonating with people. "I think that meth in the community can be very stressful. Just the effect it can have on individuals in a community creates a level of tension," said Packer. "The responses are suggesting relief. People are saying let's take some power over a drug that could be harming us." Siever gave high marks to the campaign's design, but he questioned if it was producing any real dialogue on meth use among gay men. Most people he has spoken to about the campaign said by trying to reach various target audiences, the campaign's messaging is muddled. "By its very nature the slogan sounds a little like Nancy Reagan's 'Just Say No' with cooler graphics and coolers words, maybe," said Siever. "What I found most interesting is I don't get the sense from folks I talked to that it prompted much discussion. I dont know if people are oversaturated with crystal meth messages or what." Others have said the campaign strikes a chord. One recovering meth addict wrote in an e-mail that the Web site gives him encouragement to stay clean. "Meth seduced me then left me all alone ill and broken, but somehow my will to live was stronger than meth. I promised myself first and foremost that I'd never touch it again. Somehow, I've kept that promise for 2 years now, but am always looking for reinforcement. Thank you for CARING enough to build this site," wrote the San Francisco resident. Another person wrote, "Other campaigns can seem patronizing and unrealistic. This campaign with its political art, sexy style, and strongly directed message, appeals to our humanity to resist something that we know is killing so many of us." Back in February the city paid $15,000 for a billboard in the Castro to gather input on what kind of meth campaign gay men wanted to see. According to John Leonard, senior vice president of Better World Advertising, which created the campaign, more than 110 people responded to the billboard. Replies included suggestions and ideas for the ads as well as personal stories, artwork, and songs. "We got a huge range of responses to the billboard from people who said you should lock up users and dealers and throw away the key to people who said legalize it and forget about it," he said. "By and large if there was any common theme it was that the community needs to come together to deal with this." Leonard said the ad shop's task was to create "something positive that could help mobilize the community and avoid stigmatizing users. That posed a real challenge, but I feel the campaign is succeeding in speaking to all these different audiences with a strong message and just the right tone." Better World drew on the revolutionary and wartime mobilization posters of the 20th century as inspiration for the campaign, said Leonard. "The image is meant to be sort of iconic and to evoke and appeal to a community ethic but people also look at this guy's face and see various things. Some think he is using meth and struggling with it; others see him as someone who is in recovery and moved past meth," said Leonard. "I think because the campaign is so stark and simple it allows for people to interpret in it a lot of different ways, which I think is a strength." Dufty, who had criticized the expenditure on the billboard, complimented the final outcome, though he did express discontent with the more guerilla-type aspects of the campaign, such as chalk drawings that appeared in the Castro. The sidewalk images will disappear over time if not washed away first. I am a fan of the Resist Meth campaign. I have had a number of people who wrote to me saying how striking the graphic images are and the brochure is good," said Dufty. "I struggle with this sometimes. I understand an edgy marketing approach reaches a younger audience. Certainly, that is a group we want to engage with on meth use." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom