Pubdate: Thu, 16 Feb 2012
Source: Ottawa Citizen (CN ON)
Copyright: 2012 The Ottawa Citizen
Contact: http://www.canada.com/ottawacitizen/letters.html
Website: http://www.canada.com/ottawacitizen/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/326
Author: Mark Brownlee, Ottawa Citizen

CHEO EXPERIENCING 'SURGE' IN PATIENTS NEEDING TREATMENT FOR ECSTASY
USE

A "surge" in the number of children needing help for mental health
issues stemming from drug use in the past year is frustrating doctors
at the Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario, one of the hospital's
psychiatrists said Wednesday.

Dr. Michael Cheng spoke at a news conference the Royal Canadian
Mounted Police conducted at their national headquarters to warn about
the dangers of using so-called synthetic drugs like ecstasy. CHEO'S
experience in dealing with children who use drugs is part of an
ever-expanding problem at the national level, police said.

The hospital has received so much demand for the services that staff
have had trouble keeping up.

"As a clinician, I am increasingly getting more and more frustrated at
having to deal with this problem," Cheng said. "We can help one family
at a time with different therapies, but we're beginning to realize we
have to start looking at the underlying social causes." 

The local concerns follow on the heels of 12 deaths linked to ecstasy 
in Western Canada since late last year. The latest was a 23-year-old 
student in Calgary who died on Jan. 21.

Police believe the deaths were linked to the pills being laced with
paramethoxymethamphetamine - known more commonly by the acronym PMMA.
The substance is five times more toxic than ordinary ecstasy.

Ottawa is one of the many communities across the country seeing more
ecstasy pills laced with PMMA, said Chief Barry Mcknight of the
Canadian Association of the Chiefs of Police.

Another officer said even drugs people think contain no PMMA can still
be dangerous.

"That's the problem," Mike Cabana, assistant commissioner with the
RCMP, said in a prepared statement. "There's no way to know what
you're taking and how it will affect your body."

Catherine Spanevello, whose daughter, Erin, died in 2008 of an ecstasy
overdose at the age of 21, said the drug had prompted a "national
crisis." The RCMP included her in the news conference so she could get
out her message encouraging parents to address the issue with children. 
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