Meth is destroying communities

Nurses General Nursing

Published

I am originally from a small town in southern West Virginia. I have lived away from the area for about 8 years now, but I continue to go back 3-4 times a year to visit family and friends. I have noticed over the last several years that the town I grew up in (and many small towns just like it) is being devastated by the growing methamphetamine problem. Streets that I used to ride bikes on as a kid are no longer safe, the crime rate has skyrocketed (vandalism, theft, assault, arson, you name it), a growing number of people are on welfare and are jobless because they spend all of their money doing drugs. The conditions of these towns are terrible....run-down builidings, condemned buildings (from houses that were used as meth labs), people not taking care of themselves and their properties. It makes me want to cry just thinking about how nice my little town used to be and now it's completely overrun by drugs. My mother told me that she could guarantee that if a car drives down our street past 10:00pm, 9 out of 10 times it will be a drug-run. My next door neighbors have taken in a baby of one of their relatives because the parents were so strung out on meth that they left her laying in a crib and her skull was sunken in. My first cousin has had two people found dead in her trailer within the last year and she recently came into some money (about $60,000, but that is a long story) and it's ALL gone within 4 months....all spent on drugs! Stories like this are all I hear now about the area that I grew up in. Is anyone else facing issues like this? What can be done to change this worsening epidemic? Any thougtful input would be appreciated!

Specializes in Neuro ICU, Neuro/Trauma stepdown.
they see a few people who are really confident and happy and full of energy. They find out that these people are taking Meth and then perhaps someone in the group mentions that they know someone's brother who takes Meth to help him study and so he can party all night.

i've often thought about this way. people look all around them and see 'functioning addicts'. well soandso does it and he's successful, this or that...

coming from small towns myself, we run rampant. it's cheap and when there is nothing else around, it can be made. around here, we have the problem of having propane that is not cheap and used to keep families warm and anhydrous amonia used by farmers stolen from outside our homes for cooking purposes.

Specializes in Public Health, DEI.

I've noticed a couple people have mentioned that the meth epidemic began where they live, which is interesting only because we here in Southern CA are also told that it began here! So, clearly there was a groundswell of meth activitiy at the same time in multiple points around the country. Those early participants never even knew what they were getting into, since it always takes society time to catch on to these things.

Specializes in Pain Management.

So...just please remember that these addicts, drunks and mentally ill are someone's brother, sister, son or daughter.

One of the best statements I've ever heard on this topic.

It is easy to make judgements, but I'm sure if we all look back, at some point in our life we intentionally make a risky decision. Most of us are lucky enought to come out unscathed. Some of us aren't.

I used to do E. There were nights I was completely out of it but still refused other drugs [cocaine, K, meth]. But sometimes I wonder if I would have been offered something some other night if I would have taken it...would that later snowball into something else? I used to pride myself on my fortitude to pick a choice and stick with it - I would do E but nothing else. Funny thing was, whenever I told my friend that was offering something else my decision, almost all of them said they used to think the same thing. Hmm...

I had a friend at acupuncture school that went on a mission trip to Nepal or Monglolia...I forget which. Anyway, he decided he wanted to try heroin by smoking it while he was there [very long story]. He found a place and tried it. He said it was an amazing night. The next day, when his group was moving out, he noticed there was an oddly high number of white / european men wondering around the village. He noticed that most were dirty, unkept, and rail thin.

He realized that he was looking at a his possible future. He woke with the desire to try it again and figured that it wouldn't be too dangerous if he did.

That's probably what those poor folks thought the first time they tried it. And each one of them was a son, a daughter, or something else to somebody far away that probably missed them very much.

But when we see an addict, it is easy to judge because it makes us feel better.

"I would never get to the point where I have to drink in the morning."

"I would never smoke cigarrettes if I had a lung disease."

"I would never break into my grandma's house, steal her family china, and pawn it for meth money."

Most of the time, we are probably right...we would never do these things! But I bet there is something else that we would do that somebody else would decry as foolish.

Oh, and yes, I also do this. I discriminate against those that make excuses for being obese. I can justify my distaste for their lack of willpower with statistics and logic...

Which is why I need to remember this: "just please remember that these addicts, drunks and mentally ill are someone's brother, sister, son or daughter."

Specializes in Anesthesia.
I've noticed a couple people have mentioned that the meth epidemic began where they live, which is interesting only because we here in Southern CA are also told that it began here! So, clearly there was a groundswell of meth activitiy at the same time in multiple points around the country. Those early participants never even knew what they were getting into, since it always takes society time to catch on to these things.

I read on the DEA website that the meth epidemic actually began in Hawaii, and Hawaii still has the highest rate of meth users. However, it has gradually worked its way thousands and thousands of miles across to the east coast, all the while destroying lives along the way.

I too am from WV and it is everywhere. My daughter recently lost her best friend to drugs (22 yr old). I go home several times a year and it is the same way in the western part of the state too. Where are you from in S. WVa?

I agree you can't be judgemental and let your frustration affect your care, but...sometimes I wish just one of them cleaned up after their brushes with death. Usually they just leave AMA when they are ambulatory, so they can go out...and use. The strain on their loved ones and families is tremendous and heartbreaking.

guess what? I had one of these patients today...

Some of you need to go to some open meetings of Alcoholics Anonymous or Narcotics Anonymus and SEE that there ARE those that DO recover. I know many people who have acheived and maintained living clean and sober through these programs.

Specializes in Anesthesia.
Some of you need to go to some open meetings of Alcoholics Anonymous or Narcotics Anonymus and SEE that there ARE those that DO recover. I know many people who have acheived and maintained living clean and sober through these programs.

According to the statistics on the show I watched, the recovery rate of meth addicts is about 6%......the lowest of all drugs.

Thank you for your post's. Have you ever thought about doing public speaking? Your story seems very powerful, you could help people who have lost their way.

Do you find talking about your experience is a form of therapy?

Have a blessed day

Thank you :) I was, at one stage, going to be involved with an Education program for school kids with former addicts going in and talking about their experiences but funding for it was cut so it never came to fruition. These days I'm more or less housebound due to chronic and severe anxiety, with borderline psychosis, paranoid ideations and depressive symptoms. I think I probably would have developed Mental health issues regardless of past drug use, but the Drugs certainly didn't help and also like many others I did use drugs to cope with the symptoms of Mental illness. I accepted I had a problem but I refused medication or help for it...I thought I could get over it if I just "got my s*it together". I personally think that instead of Govts throwing money towards the so called "war on drugs" and making penalties for users harsher, they should put more money towards education and destigmatisation about Mental Illnesses and better care and resources for sufferers. If people with Mental Illness had access to good quality affordable and expediate care without fear of stigma or judgement by society, I think you could almost solve the entire drug problem of the western world.

We have a huge meth problem in the town next to us (we also have a big problem in my town. The town was know for being the meth capital of the state (possible in the US) back in the 90's.

My husband is a correctional officer for our county and sees the daily problems associated w/ meth (crime, hiv/ hep, child abuse/ neglect, etc) This drug is completely out of control because of the cheapness, ease of making it, and ease of finding the material for making it. One of the main ingredients for making it is an OTC decongestant. Almost anyone w/ a little chemistry knowledge can make it which makes it that much more dangerous.

One of the things that stores/state laws are starting to do in our area is to limit the amount of the OTC drug (2-3 boxes at a time) that you may buy at one time and locking up the med so it is harder to steal.

If you are truely worried about the town you grew up in maybe you could contact the local police dept or mayor and see what you can do to help. There are different groups that go out and try to help the community. It is so sad to say, but meth is here and it is killing more and more of our citizens.

Erin (who has seen what meth can do to a community first hand)

I was born and raised in the area you are referring to. (Sad you don't even need to give the name for me to know that). I don't know if it's getting worse, or if I'm just not used to it anymore since I've lived in Seattle for the last three years, but I was just down there and it seemed worse than ever. Outside the new Super Wal-Mart, my husband and I were harassed by a group of guys who were obviously on meth, wanting money. They would not take no for an answer. It was actually quite scary. You shouldn't have to feel unsafe in a town of 9,000 people, but when meth is involved, it makes everything unsafe!

Specializes in Nephrology, Cardiology, ER, ICU.

Willowbrook - with my son it started with depression and has spiralled downward. I truly wish you the best. I hope that you can get to a happier place. You have so much to offer.

I want to publicly thank everyone for their support. Thank you.

Another voice for compassion, here. We have no idea whats behind the situations we see in our clinics and hospital ERs, and on the streets. I'm no angel and prior to my nursing career I had my share of years that are now a blur due to meth, pot, alcohol and other things.(I am now certified by an addictionologist to be psychologically sound)

I saw people crash, burn and die from it all, and others, many of them nurses, who sailed through, functioning with society as addicts for whom the bad effects never showed up. Each of us is individual, and there is no way of knowing how anything,from drugs to simple stress, will effect us untill it happens.

We nurses have a bad habit of making judgements about people in our care because we only see the disasterous end results, not the step by step process of less than ideal decisions that lead to it.

I find my background in addiction and the grey area beyond/beneath "normal society" where functional addicts live, gives me a sense of perspective and compassion for my patients. While I do not condone addictive behavior, I do understand it, and the reasoning, such as it is, behind the actions.

To a certain degree my past also gives me a much better tuned "bullshit-o-meter" when presented with a line of delusion/rationalization by an addict. It helps keep my compassion from getting gooey and unprofessional.

I get so sad and depressed when I read about the problem of drugs. Its so aweful, so many wasted lives. So many hurt and damaged people, children not cared for. Horrible.

+ Add a Comment