Pubdate: Thu, 21 Jan 2016 Source: Journal-Pioneer, The (CN PI) Copyright: 2016 Journal-Pioneer Contact: http://www.journalpioneer.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2789 Author: Nancy MacPhee Page: A3 NEED FOR SPEED Illegal Drug Overtakes Prescription Narcotics As Drug of Choice in Prince County Dr. Don Ling calls it worrisome, a drug that quickly takes users into its grip. Speed. Crank. Ice. Methamphetamine. It's become the drug of choice of Prince County addicts. "As a stimulant, it accelerates everything. It will speed up your heart and give you a rush," said Ling. "It is a tough drug. It is so prevalent, so available. It is fairly cheap and it is a grabber, there is no doubt about that." Ling, director of the province's methadone program, has worked in addictions for 14 years and oversees a once-weekly methadone clinic at Prince County Hospital. More and more clients of that clinic are coming in addicted to speed. "They use it to get that accelerated feeling. It is kind of peddled and sold as giving them more energy," said Ling. "It has been prevalent in Summerside for a few years now. It seems to have hit earlier and harder in Summerside than even in Charlottetown. That is where I first became aware of it." Speed is a man-made illegal addictive stimulant drug, produced purely to get high. "It is kind of like a little junior cocaine," said Ling. "If you overuse it or use it excessively, you drive your heart pretty hard." It's cheap, at $ 4 to $ 5 a pill. In Summerside, where Ling has about 175 patients, seeing 20 to 25 each week, speed shows up in the tests of between 10 and 20 per cent of clients. Cannabis is still the drug most prevalent drug - showing up in the test results of most people visiting the Summerside clinic - followed by opioids, prescription drugs that, when used as prescribed, are used to treat various medical conditions. Opioid addiction is still a big issue but on the decline, said Link, largely due to the success of the province's methadone program. The "dramatic" increase in the prevalence of speed is troubling, said Leslie Warren, manager of Addictions Services East. "A lot of it is so new to us, too. We are learning about it. Once we get our feet under us, it is about providing more education, especially to our youth," said Warren. There are no numbers regarding those in active treatment for speed addiction. "When we look at methamphetamine, we think, what else is coming to our province? It just puts up those red flags of something new," said Warren. "What is it? What are they using? I don't know if they know what they are actually taking. Where is it coming from? Is it coming from off Island? What is it cut with? There are concerns." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom