Pot times July 15, 2005
Crystal Meth Linked To Rising STI Rates
URL: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v05/n1119/a10.htmlNewshawk: Herb
Pubdate: Thu, 14 Jul 2005 CRYSTAL METH LINKED TO RISING STI RATES
Source: Capital Xtra! (CN ON)
Copyright: 2005 Pink Triangle Press
Contact:
capxtra@xtra.ca
Website: http://www.xtra.ca/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2153
Author: Julie Weisberg
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?241
(Methamphetamine - Canada)
Ottawa Educators Focus On Harm Reduction Strategies
The recent rise in sexually transmitted infection rates among gay men in Canada
and the US has alarmed many health and wellness workers in the queer community.
Several diseases, such as gonorrhea, syphilis and even HIV, have experienced
recent spikes in their infection rates.
And while most health professionals agree that there are several factors behind
the rise, one commonality among many new infections - particularly among men who
have recently tested positive for HIV - is crystal meth.
Several US studies have linked the amphetamine to 30 to 40 percent of new HIV
infections among gay men. A Jan 19 article in the Los Angeles Times cites
a recent report by San Francisco's Stop AIDS Project, which found one-fifth of
gay and bisexual men surveyed had used crystal meth in the last six months,
while a third of those who had recently tested positive for HIV had used it in
the previous six months.
According to Lynne Belle-Isle of the Canadian AIDS Society - who has extensively
researched the drug and its use among gay men - due to the links made between
crystal meth use and significant increases in HIV infection rates in many US
cities, crystal meth has been identified as "an emerging issue" within
the Canadian AIDS community.
"We started looking into how much of an issue is this in Canada. And
we discovered that it has emerged in Vancouver, Toronto and a little bit in
Montreal," says Belle-Isle. "So we are trying to be proactive
and to get as much information out to the communities to hopefully prevent this
from happening in Canada."
Belle-Isle says recent reports indicate increasing numbers of gay men in
Canadian cities are using crystal meth ( also called Tina ) while engaging in
high-risk sexual behaviours. And although several other party drugs are
much more widely used within Canada's gay community than crystal meth, the fact
that it has begun to show up in the bathhouses and circuit parties in many parts
of the country is a concern.
"And this is something that has been reported to me from people who go to
these places, this isn't just us fear-mongering," says Belle-Isle of the
awareness work CAS has begun regarding the drug. "We're totally not
anti-fun. In fact, we're all about harm reduction when it comes to any
kind of drug use: Be careful, and get the information you need to be able to
make good choices, safe choices."
And while it is a reality that many men safely meld sex, drugs and rock and roll
as "weekend warriors," crystal meth can hardly be considered a
"safe" drug.
Created by cooking up several highly toxic and volatile substances, batches
often contain ether, battery acid, insecticides, solvents and lye - in addition
to its active ingredient, ephedrine, usually obtained from over-the-counter cold
medicines.
But the fact that the drug is cheap, usually selling for between $10-15 a pop,
and gives an intense euphoria that can last anywhere from to eight to 10 hours
at a time, makes it a highly appealing choice for those who want to get the most
bang for their buck.
Unfortunately, the drug is also highly addictive, some say on a crack-like
level, and tends to send users into a psychotic state far deeper and more
frequently than most other street drugs.
Equally worrying, says Belle-Isle, are the sexual rituals that have developed
around the drug, which often rears its ugly head in marathon multi-partner
barebacking sessions.
"It does have a specific, stimulating effect on the sex drive. And it
also seems to make people feel very invincible, fearless, that they can conquer
the world, and all these things come into play," says Belle-Isle.
During these sessions, users are often unable to sustain an erection, a
phenomenon which has come to be known as "Tina dick." To counter this,
the drug is often coupled with Viagra.
"The reason we're becoming more vocal about crystal meth is really to get
people to think about their health in general - how far are you willing to go to
put your health at risk?" says Belle-Isle.
For local health and wellness officials, however, the more immediate question
is, has it become a problem in Ottawa?
Barry Deeprose, co-chair of the Gay Men's Wellness Initiative, says crystal meth
use among gay men in Ottawa has been difficult to gauge.
"It really is an enigma in this city - we have talked about it at Gay Men's
Wellness, but we just have not been able to get hard evidence," says
Deeprose. "But I don't know, I can remember in the early '80s, when
we thought that HIV would somehow not come to Ottawa. I really think it's
a false reassurance that it is not here. I just can't imagine that it
won't happen in Ottawa."
Jacques Neron, supervisor of outreach services for Ottawa's Sexual Health Centre,
says while it appears that crystal meth use among Ottawa's gay community is
marginal, it may be due to the fact that many local men choose to party and play
in Montreal.
"It is important for us as a public health agency to look into any factor
contributing to the increasing rate of STIs or HIV. We are concerned about
it in that sense," says Neron. "But we also know that [between]
Ottawa, Toronto and Montreal, that there is a lot of traffic, and a lot of the
raves are happening in Toronto and Montreal, so we do feel that there is also
some information that needs to be going out."
But according to Sylvain Duguay, the intervention coordinator at Action Sero
Zero in Montreal, "crystal meth use is still marginal in Montreal's gay
community.
"In fact, it is marginal everywhere in Montreal: street youth don't seem to
use it, while it is common among them in other Canadian cities," says
Duguay. "We think it's simply a question of market - bikers may not
be ready to sell it. [Although] we sometimes hear that people [have]
brought crystal in to Montreal from other cities."
After visiting several US cities recently, however, Deeprose is wary of the drug
and the effect it could soon have on Ottawa's local gay community.
"If it is happening in San Francisco, you can be sure it is happening in
Vancouver. I think that there tends to be a bit of lag, as there was with
HIV, but that lag should not be read as the fact that it is not coming
here," says Deeprose. "I think that it is nothing more than a
delay. A couple of hundred miles are not going to protect us."
