Pubdate: Sat, 13 Jun 2009
Source: Honolulu Star-Bulletin (HI)
Copyright: 2009 Honolulu Star-Bulletin
Contact: http://starbulletin.com/forms/letterform.html
Website: http://www.starbulletin.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/196
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine)

SHOWING METH'S UGLY EFFECTS

Television viewers in Hawaii are being jarred by a flourish of 
public-service warnings about the danger of methamphetamine. The 
worthy campaign will be successful if it makes gains experienced in 
Montana, where the inaugural program has drastically reduced the use 
of meth as a major crime problem.

Use of crystal meth reached a peak in Hawaii in 2005 and declined in 
the next two years. No figures are available from last year, when the 
Hawaii Meth Project launched its first campaign patterned after the 
Montana blitz. However, crystal meth used in the workplace dropped 33 
percent from the first quarter of 2007 to the second quarter of 2008, 
according to Karl Espaldon, the state's drug-control liaison.

A continuing downturn is far from guaranteed. Maui police officer Ken 
Doyle told the Maui News that the economic recession is increasing 
the drug trade. "As people lose their jobs, times are going to be 
tough," he said. "People are going to do things they wouldn't normally do."

Montana's meth abuse per capita went from fifth-highest in the 
country in 2005 to 39th-highest last year, as teenage meth use 
declined by 45 percent and adult use dropped by 62 percent. If the 
progress continues, said Mike McGrath, that state's attorney general, 
"Methamphetamine will have changed from a crisis to a manageable problem."

Like Montana's campaign, the Hawaii effort consists of messages via 
television, radio, newspapers and the Internet. Statewide education 
and outreach programs also are planned, said Cindy Adams, the Hawaii 
project's executive director. The program has expanded to include 
Arizona, Illinois, Idaho, Wyoming and Colorado.

The Hawaii project has released results of a new survey taken in 
March and April showing that one in five teens and one in three 
adults in the state report that meth is readily available. One in 10 
teens and one in five young adults report they have close friends who use meth.

In addition, 30 percent of Hawaii's teens believe that trying meth 
carries no risk, according to the survey.  The project's 30-second TV 
spots drive home the reality that it can be quickly addictive. Young 
people in the ads portray experiencing mental and physical 
deterioration after promising to try meth only once.

"This survey clearly demonstrates our young people are dangerously 
unaware of the risks posed by meth use," said Dr. Kevin Kunz, 
president of the American Board of Addiction Medicine. He cited the 
survey's finding that 41 percent of Hawaii teens would not give 
friends a "hard time" if they used meth and 40 percent have not tried 
to dissuade their friends from using it.

Television viewers in Hawaii are being jarred by a flourish of 
public-service warnings about the danger of methamphetamine. The 
worthy campaign will be successful if it makes gains experienced in 
Montana, where the inaugural program has drastically reduced the use 
of meth as a major crime problem.

Use of crystal meth reached a peak in Hawaii in 2005 and declined in 
the next two years. No figures are available from last year, when the 
Hawaii Meth Project launched its first campaign patterned after the 
Montana blitz. However, crystal meth used in the workplace dropped 33 
percent from the first quarter of 2007 to the second quarter of 2008, 
according to Karl Espaldon, the state's drug-control liaison.

A continuing downturn is far from guaranteed. Maui police officer Ken 
Doyle told the Maui News that the economic recession is increasing 
the drug trade. "As people lose their jobs, times are going to be 
tough," he said. "People are going to do things they wouldn't normally do."

Montana's meth abuse per capita went from fifth-highest in the 
country in 2005 to 39th-highest last year, as teenage meth use 
declined by 45 percent and adult use dropped by 62 percent. If the 
progress continues, said Mike McGrath, that state's attorney general, 
"Methamphetamine will have changed from a crisis to a manageable problem."

Like Montana's campaign, the Hawaii effort consists of messages via 
television, radio, newspapers and the Internet. Statewide education 
and outreach programs also are planned, said Cindy Adams, the Hawaii 
project's executive director. The program has expanded to include 
Arizona, Illinois, Idaho, Wyoming and Colorado.

The Hawaii project has released results of a new survey taken in 
March and April showing that one in five teens and one in three 
adults in the state report that meth is readily available. One in 10 
teens and one in five young adults report they have close friends who use meth.

In addition, 30 percent of Hawaii's teens believe that trying meth 
carries no risk, according to the survey.  The project's 30-second TV 
spots drive home the reality that it can be quickly addictive. Young 
people in the ads portray experiencing mental and physical 
deterioration after promising to try meth only once.

"This survey clearly demonstrates our young people are dangerously 
unaware of the risks posed by meth use," said Dr. Kevin Kunz, 
president of the American Board of Addiction Medicine. He cited the 
survey's finding that 41 percent of Hawaii teens would not give 
friends a "hard time" if they used meth and 40 percent have not tried 
to dissuade their friends from using it. 
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