News (Media Awareness Project) - US MO: Editorial: The Scourge Of Meth |
Title: | US MO: Editorial: The Scourge Of Meth |
Published On: | 2004-05-08 |
Source: | The Southeast Missourian (MO) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-18 10:21:37 |
THE SCOURGE OF METH
Law enforcement in Missouri is waging a high-profile war on methamphetamine
that makes headlines every time a meth lab is busted.
But meth is a scourge that cannot be countered with arrests and prison
sentences alone. Educating people about the poisonous toll taken by
methamphetamine is critical to getting use and manufacture of the drug
under control. And it may be impossible to start the education too soon.
Two Southeast Missouri State University professors have developed a program
to help educate young children about meth.
Called Meth Education for Elementary Schools, it originally was aimed at
Cape Girardeau and Kansas City students age 16 and up. They adapted the
program for younger students with the help of grants from Midwest High
Intensity Drug Traffic Areas, the Missouri Department of Public Safety and
the university.
Dr. John Wade and Linda Keena, both members of the faculty in the
Department of Criminal Justice and Sociology at the university, customized
the program to help third- and fourth-grade teachers educate their students
about the dangers of methamphetamine.
Southeast Missouri is a hotbed of meth activity. It is reassuring that our
university is trying to do something to stop it.
Gov. Bob Holden appointed both Wade and Keena to the Missouri
Methamphetamine Task Force. They presented a paper about their work during
the recent governor's summit on methamphetamine in Kansas City.
Meth stimulates the central nervous system to produce levels of neurotoxins
the brain cannot deal with. Use can lead to psychosis and deadly strokes.
Long-term effects include respiratory problems, extreme anorexia, tooth
loss and cardiovascular collapse.
In addition, cleaning up meth labs is dangerous and expensive.
The social and financial costs caused by methamphetamine are almost
incalculable. The state task force recognizes that, along with vigilance by
law enforcement, entire communities must be educated if meth ultimately is
to be rejected as the poison it is.
Law enforcement in Missouri is waging a high-profile war on methamphetamine
that makes headlines every time a meth lab is busted.
But meth is a scourge that cannot be countered with arrests and prison
sentences alone. Educating people about the poisonous toll taken by
methamphetamine is critical to getting use and manufacture of the drug
under control. And it may be impossible to start the education too soon.
Two Southeast Missouri State University professors have developed a program
to help educate young children about meth.
Called Meth Education for Elementary Schools, it originally was aimed at
Cape Girardeau and Kansas City students age 16 and up. They adapted the
program for younger students with the help of grants from Midwest High
Intensity Drug Traffic Areas, the Missouri Department of Public Safety and
the university.
Dr. John Wade and Linda Keena, both members of the faculty in the
Department of Criminal Justice and Sociology at the university, customized
the program to help third- and fourth-grade teachers educate their students
about the dangers of methamphetamine.
Southeast Missouri is a hotbed of meth activity. It is reassuring that our
university is trying to do something to stop it.
Gov. Bob Holden appointed both Wade and Keena to the Missouri
Methamphetamine Task Force. They presented a paper about their work during
the recent governor's summit on methamphetamine in Kansas City.
Meth stimulates the central nervous system to produce levels of neurotoxins
the brain cannot deal with. Use can lead to psychosis and deadly strokes.
Long-term effects include respiratory problems, extreme anorexia, tooth
loss and cardiovascular collapse.
In addition, cleaning up meth labs is dangerous and expensive.
The social and financial costs caused by methamphetamine are almost
incalculable. The state task force recognizes that, along with vigilance by
law enforcement, entire communities must be educated if meth ultimately is
to be rejected as the poison it is.
Member Comments |
No member comments available...