Pubdate: Mon, 28 Jun 2010 Source: Garden Island (Lihue, HI) Copyright: 2010 Kauai Publishing Co. Contact: http://kauaiworld.com/forms/letters/ Website: http://kauaiworld.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/964 Author: Paul C. Curtis Editor's Note: This Is The Third Article In A Series About Methamphetamine Use In Hawai'i. METH ADDICTION'S MANY FACES LIHU'E - Lots of people have seen the TV images of how a healthy, vibrant person can transform into a scab-covered, scary-looking criminal once in the clutches of methamphetamine addiction. But recent research indicates the meth addict may be your co-worker, possibly someone in the next cubicle. Diagnostic Laboratories, which conducts workplace blood and urine tests for alcohol and drugs, found workforce meth use in Hawai'i increased 33 percent last year compared to 2008, and was up 22 percent in the first quarter of this year compared to the same period last year, according to statistics compiled by the Hawai'i Meth Project. Meth use and treatment in Hawai'i are considerably higher than the national average, with Hawai'i ranking fifth in the nation for meth use by people ages 12 and older, project research indicates. While the TV images show ghoulish-looking figures as the faces of meth addiction, reality in Hawai'i is that an addict could just as easily be a normal-looking, normal-acting golfing buddy or shopping friend. "We think we know what a meth addict looks like, but a meth addict doesn't always look like what we think a meth addict might look like," said Cindy Adams, executive director of the Hawai'i Meth Project. There are images that can be seen at drugfree.org (search for "faces of meth"), showing gruesome transformations from normal to hideous as a result of meth addiction, and then there are the people next door, the ones Adams calls "functional users." Functional users are those with a consistent level of meth use that is necessary for them to continue to function in society. "I do believe that it's happening, and Diagnostic Laboratories data shows that," she said. "Then there are those who become so addicted that they look like a user or addict, the person whose life becomes totally consumed by use," she said, to the point that they quit eating and bathing and become physically and mentally ill because of their addiction. Those wishing to intervene first must have an ability to encourage friends, family members and loved ones to seek treatment, but not when the addict is coming down off a high, called "tweaking," when they are "unstable, volatile," she said. "You have to look after your own safety," Adams said, and consider police intervention or other professional help for some addicts. A recent case of a machete-wielding man in Honolulu who police officers ended up killing revealed that the man was tweaking at the time of his death, said Adams. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart