Pubdate: Wed, 03 Mar 2010 Source: Clarion-Ledger, The (Jackson, MS) Copyright: 2010 The Clarion-Ledger Contact: http://mapinc.org/url/cHy7vhe4 Website: http://www.clarionledger.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/805 Author: Garry Pettus Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) 'METH OVERTAKES PEOPLE' Brains Altered; Families Broken Methamphetamine wrecks lives because it wrecks the brain. And it destroys self control. So says Cathy Dixon, a Jackson-area psychologist and consultant who lectures on meth abuse. "The first thing you're going to find in a home where meth is abused is pornography," she said. "The second thing is weapons." Meth is a pervasive, illegal stimulant the Drug Enforcement Administration calls the fastest-growing drug threat in Mississippi. Last year, at least 620 seizures of meth laboratories were made by law enforcement - more than double the number in 2008. For those who go into rehabilitation for meth abuse, the recovery phase can be a lengthy, difficult process. That's because, depending on the severity of the addiction, repairing the brain offers a unique challenge to mental health experts. The average rehab period for a meth user is nine months, said Judge William Skinner, who presides over Hinds County felony drug court. It's only about a month for a crack addict, he said. About 10 percent of meth users he sees are successful in rehab, compared to 40 percent of crack addicts, he said. "Meth overtakes people," Skinner said. "Parents who have been on marijuana or cocaine will try to do all the things they must do to get their children back from state custody. "I haven't had one crystal-meth parent even try." Skinner and others who confront meth abuse expect to get a break starting July 1. That's the effective date of a law restricting the purchase of pseudoephedrine-containing medications to prescription only. Ephedrine or pseudoephedrine, an essential ingredient in meth, is found in cold-symptom remedies such as Sudafed. For the past few years, the so-called precursor law has put limitations on the sale of those products. But with no central database in place, meth makers can go to multiple stores to buy the drugs, a practice called "smurfing." The new law should make it much tougher to manufacture meth in Mississippi, said Marshall Fisher, head of the Mississippi Bureau of Narcotics. Citing the new prescription requirement, Fisher said, "It's a whole lot easier to deal with a bad doctor writing bad prescriptions than it is to deal with 600 labs." In the meantime, at least, those who treat meth addicts don't expect the wave of cases to abate. At the Friendship Connection, a nonprofit drug and alcohol rehab program for women released from prison, the number of former meth abusers has shot up about 15 percent over the past five years. That's the best estimate from Terri Micou-Smith, executive director. Asked if she believes meth abuse is harder to overcome than other addictions, Smith said, "All drugs are hard to deal with if the person has no desire to stay clean and sober. "Or if they don't understand that the results will be the same if they go back to the same environment." Before rehab, making good decisions is not a meth abuser's strong suit. "What makes this really difficult is meth affects the area of the brain that affects judgment," said Michael Spradling, a certified alcohol and drug counselor for Region III Chemical Dependency Services in Tupelo. "You don't know your brain isn't working right." Of the three or four people his facility admits daily, at least one will be on crystal meth or opiates - heroin, morphine, methadone, etc. "We used to see a lot more cocaine and alcohol," he said. "We see very little of that anymore." Treating meth addicts is a matter of "physical, mental and spiritual rehabilitation," he said. "People have said it's like treating stroke victims. "You help them regain their status and normal function in society because meth causes changes in the brain." Those changes pump up the addiction, Dixon said. "The more a person takes it, the more the person craves it. That is unlike cocaine." The brain is retooled as a factory of paranoid, erotic and violent thoughts. "The chance of a (drug agent) running into gunplay increases exponentially with a meth operation," Fisher said. The drug boosts the human libido, or sex drive, Dixon said. That's why agents often uncover pornography in a meth home. And, sometimes, abuse. "Neglect is the first line of suffering children typically experience," Dixon said. "Beyond that, they are exposed to violence, drug use, drug manufacture. "There's a very high rate of domestic violence, and very high rates of sexual abuse. "If we can get a handle on this drug, we can save a lot of children." Dixon, Fisher and others say the state has come a long way in battling meth addiction by passing the prescription law and by establishing drug courts like the one Skinner oversees. Those courts mandate accountability, follow-up and support for recovering addicts of all stripes. Still, Mississippi needs specialized treatment programs, Dixon said. "Sending someone to treatment to detox for 30 days is not going to touch meth addiction. "Clearly, that's a whole population of folks who aren't getting proper treatment - because, as Judge Skinner says, they never come back for their children." - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D