Pubdate: Sun, 07 Jul 2013 Source: Odessa American (TX) Copyright: 2013 Odessa American Contact: http://www.oaoa.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/708 Author: Michelle Brownstone ODESSA CONTINUES TO BATTLE SYNTHETIC DRUG PROBLEM Local Hospital Sees Increase in Synthetic Drug Patients Before October, Tonya Lane had no idea what synthetic drugs were. Then she received a call from her 14-year-old son's junior high school. He was found in possession of synthetic marijuana on school property and was asked to leave. "I'm really upset this stuff could be sold," Lane, 44, said. "He's been in the hospital two times for a week at a time and had a seizure." Lane said when her son started using the drug, in colorful packaging and marketed as incense she said is geared toward youth, he changed by becoming violent, angry and eventually suicidal. Odessa Police Department spokesman Steve LeSueur said while there are several different forms of synthetic drugs, including synthetic marijuana and bath salts, all remain equally problematic because they do not contain a standard through the FDA or any scientific regulation. "The main issue with synthetic drugs is that the potency can be extremely higher than that of the illegal drug they are attempting to mimic, causing adverse reactions that have not been seen outside of overdoses," LeSueur said in an email. Medical Center Hospital Registered Nurse Manuel Guerrero said the symptoms Lane's son faced are common of synthetic drug use. Guerrero said the hospital is seeing more than double the number of patients treated for using synthetic drugs than they did just two years ago and estimated they see at least 20 cases each week. The majority of patients are in their teens and 20s, he said. "The long-term effects of synthetic drug use are unknown," Guerrero said. "A substantial amount of patients come in from synthetic drug use. Symptoms range from aggression and agitation to psychosis and paranoia. We have seen people with hallucinations, seizures, heart racing, nausea and vomiting. Occasionally we get people who are unable to speak." Odessa Police Chief Tim Burton said synthetic drugs remain an emerging problem in the city. "It is increasing in volume," Burton said. "It's a problem that is increasing in the number of incidents we see anecdotally day in and day out." Lane said so far she has spent more than $5,000 out of pocket on medical bills. Her son is doing much better and she is homeschooling him now, she said. However, she is outraged that synthetic drugs are still being sold at several locations in the city. Anna Scroggins, the founder of New Day Counseling, an outpatient drug facility in Odessa, has been treating clients with alcohol and drug addictions for more than 10 years. New Day receives two or three phone calls every week inquiring about synthetic drug use treatment, she said. "Stores do not get in trouble because they're calling it potpourri," Scroggins said. "They're putting on the packaging that it's not meant for human consumption, but if you look up the definition of potpourri, it says can be or is ingested through the nose and that makes it made for human consumption. It's just a play on words. It's a huge battle. There is no law in the state that says you cannot sell potpourri." Odessa One Stop Grocery is one of several stores in Odessa selling packages of the incense product Scroggins calls synthetic marijuana. "I have no problem with this," the clerk behind the counter said. "No more than tobacco or alcohol. It's all the same, just another product that comes through." Scroggins presented the Odessa City Council with an unofficial petition to ban synthetic drugs signed by more than 700 Odessans at its last meeting on June 25. "We have limited resources for treatment in our area," she said. "(There are many) that are not getting the proper treatment." While laws do exist making certain synthetic drugs illegal, formulas and chemicals are changed to get around those laws, Scroggins said. "There is a virtual endless combination of chemical mixtures to produce different compounds," Burton said. "The ability to specifically identify any given compound and pass it as against the law has become a bit of a moving target." Odessa Mayor David Turner said he's working with the district attorney to try to find the best way to approach the complex problem. "We have been looking into this since I was elected," Turner said June 25. "I've been working with (Ector County District Attorney) Bobby Bland and (County Attorney) Scott Layh to go at it a different way. We want to go at it at a civil side or do something to put these people out of business." According to the Associated Press, the Drug Enforcement Administration and other federal agencies served hundreds of search and arrest warrants to synthetic drug distributors across the country last week. The AP also reported that millions of dollars in profits end up in Middle Eastern countries. Scroggins said her goal now is to appeal to city leaders and emergency room directors to help them ban the sale of all synthetic drugs. "I want our city officials and emergency room directors to try to come up with something," Scroggins said. "We need to incorporate other ordinances to stop this." "We need to get this stuff off the shelves," Lane said. "Not just in this city but across the entire nation." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom