Pubdate: 22 Nov 2011 Source: Marlborough Express (New Zealand) Contact: 2011 Independent Newspapers Limited Website: http://www.marlboroughexpress.co.nz/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1139 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) SICKENING STATISTICS New research about the effects of women using methamphetamine while they are pregnant is horrifying, but more because of the minor detail than the headline results. The research by Auckland University of 120 women shows the first generation of New Zealand babies exposed to methamphetamine (also known as P or meth) in the womb are reaching school age, and are more affected than babies in the United States, where the drug is usually less pure than the form available here. The result is worrying. The 120 young mums came from Auckland and Waitakere, but many referred by midwives and neo-natal carers were ruled out because they were too young or were using too many other drugs. Research co-leader Dr Trecia Wouldes said it was almost impossible to gauge the prevalence of meth use during pregnancy, although one indicator was the difficulty finding young mothers not using some form of recreational drug. "In young mothers, 17 and 18, without NCEA qualifications, we couldn't find! ... mothers who didn't use meth," she said. "Every time we'd find a mother who didn't have NCEA, she'd be using meth."Horrifying. The children of these "children" are turning up at primary schools with signs of learning and developmental problems, although Dr Wouldes was reluctant to blame this on just meth. The education system can expect a great many more children affected by drugs. Schools in regions such as Marlborough are much less likely to face these problems than centres such as Auckland, but the resources needed to cope with the problem will be a drain on the budget nationally. There is only so much the Government can do to clamp down on the import and manufacture of recreational drugs, particularly meth. The harder they try and the more successful they are, the more resourceful the offenders become. The price goes up, so the most needy children get even less care. It is utterly sickening that anyone who becomes pregnant cares so little about their unborn child! that they continue to abuse drugs. Perhaps it is time for authorities to consider the rights of the child over the parent's freedom of choice. Scary, but necessary. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom