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Meth abuse elevates HIV crisis for gays
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution ^ | 04/17/04 | CAMERON McWHIRTER, JILL YOUNG MILLER

Posted on 04/18/2004 2:10:14 PM PDT by Wally_Kalbacken

When Patrick Smith started using methamphetamine, he quickly found that sex and the potent drug — which gay men call Tina or Crystal — became hopelessly connected.

Whenever he had sex, he wanted meth. Whenever he was high on meth, he wanted sex.

A methamphetamine user since he was 16, Smith spent years having anonymous, unprotected sex while high. He took the drug whenever he could. He hooked up with male partners — he has no idea how many — at large dance parties and at all-night sex clubs.

Smith ran out of money and prostituted himself. He was hospitalized about six times after overdosing on combinations of drugs. Meth was always in the mix.

One morning about two years ago, Smith woke up in his living room after a meth binge. His head was gashed and bleeding. Shattered glass lay everywhere.

"My head had crashed through a glass table, and I didn't remember any of it," said Smith, 24.

He checked into a yearlong drug rehab program. After medical tests, counselors told him he had contracted HIV, the virus that causes AIDS. He believes he contracted the disease while having sex with strangers while on meth.

According to a new study of gay men in San Francisco by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, men who used meth were twice as likely to have unprotected sex as those who did not. Another study, by the San Francisco Department of Public Health, found that men who used meth were more than three times as likely to be HIV-positive.

Gay health organizations in San Francisco and New York have launched public awareness campaigns warning about meth use and HIV transmission through risky sexual behavior.

Smith is one of a growing number of young gay men in Atlanta who believe they contracted HIV after meth abuse and risky sex. But in metro Atlanta, which has the largest concentration of gays in the Deep South, AIDS groups have not yet started meth-specific education campaigns. The problem, however, has become a crisis, say some therapists and medical experts who treat gay men.

"They are taking outrageous risks," said John Ballew, an Atlanta therapist who says two-thirds of his clients are gay men. "It has really become associated with the fast-lane night life among certain gay men. My professional take on it is, the problem is just as bad as [in] New York or San Francisco or Los Angeles."

Meth use among gay men in Atlanta is "really, really insidious," said Michael Dubin, a counselor whose clients are all gay men. "From what I am hearing from friends and from clients, it is a lot more extensive than any of us would like to think, especially in the club scene. And it leads to people throwing caution to the wind — when they know better."

Dr. Sanjay Sharma, a psychiatrist at Grady Health System's infectious disease program, said the drug's use among gay men has become a serious health concern. "A lot of these substances, crystal meth in particular, are associated with euphoria and hypersexuality," he said. "And along with that, increased sexual risk-taking behaviors, and then an overall impaired judgment. That's not a good combination of effects."

Many gay men have never tried methamphetamine. Some have only experimented briefly with the drug. But a minority of gay men habitually abuse the drug during sexual encounters with multiple partners. For these men, meth use has become part of sex.

Meth, a psychostimulant that excites pleasure centers in the brain, makes users feel euphoric for hours. The drug impairs judgment, lowers inhibitions, keeps people awake for days, and can increase sexual arousal.

"They go from feeling like wallflowers to feeling like supermen," Ballew said. "Safer sex messages are just forgotten."

Many men have told Ballew the drug is rampant in their social circle. "This drug has become almost normalized in the community," he said. "It's hard to see how it could become more of a problem."

Decades of drug abuse

Methamphetamine has been abused in the United States for decades, especially on the West Coast. The drug can be snorted, injected, swallowed and smoked, and some gay men insert it anally.

The meth crisis among gay men is occurring in tandem with a dramatic surge in meth use by heterosexuals, especially in rural areas across Georgia and the nation. The potent, cheap drug is the leading illegally manufactured drug in the nation, according to the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration.

Meth abuse among urban, rural and suburban heterosexuals has increased crime and caused enormous health and social problems. But the drug use among heterosexuals has not been as associated with risky sexual behavior as it is among young gay men living in cities like Atlanta.

Smith said he had sworn off meth and other illegal drugs since he fell through the table. But he said the allure of the drug was powerful.

"It gives people a way to have sex for hours and hours and hours," said Smith, who grew up in Marietta and now lives in Decatur. "It's the greatest euphoria you can ever feel."

'Party and play'

Meth is so linked with this subculture of gay men engaging in anonymous sex with strangers that men advertise either that they have the drug or want it during sex in personal ads and on the Internet. Their notices carry the phrase "PnP" for "party and play," a euphemism for crystal methamphetamine and sex.

"People will have what they call Tina sex parties," said Danny Sprouse, coordinator of HIV prevention and mental health services for gay and bisexual men at Positive Impact Inc., an Atlanta nonprofit that counsels people with HIV. "They may set up some rules at the beginning to say, 'You can only have safe sex.' So they'll have a lot of condoms available."

Or they may have Tina parties where condoms aren't even allowed, Sprouse said, "where they say, 'We're only going to have unsafe sex.' "

Even at condoms-only Tina parties, men don't always use protection as the drug kicks in and the night wears on, he said.

John, a 36-year-old gay man who lives in Midtown, said he wished he had never touched the stuff.

"On Tina, you make bad judgments about safe sex, about your life, about just about everything," he said.

John asked that his last name not be published. He has known since 1997 he is HIV-positive. He used meth for more than 18 months until he quit, with great difficulty, this Jan. 1, he said.

While on methamphetamine, he frequented all-night Atlanta sex clubs and often had anonymous, unprotected sex with men who also were high on the drug, he said.

"I think there's a possibility that I may have infected someone. I couldn't tell you who," John said. "And I have the feeling that the people that I did have unprotected sex with had already had unprotected sex with other people, so there's no way for them to know if it would have been me or someone else."

Clubs encourage safety

All-male clubs in Atlanta, such as the bathhouse Flex, generally have policies banning drugs on the premises, distribute free condoms, and encourage their patrons to use protection.

At Flex, if a customer is discovered using or selling drugs, "we revoke their membership and immediately dismiss them from the property," said Charles Fleck, who lives in Miami and owns a chain of male bathhouses including Flex.

Gay men are much more likely to associate meth with sex, though prolonged abuse of the drug has been known to affect a man's ability to maintain an erection, according to Michael Siever, founder and director of the San Francisco-based Stonewall Project, which counsels gay and bisexual men about the risks of abusing methamphetamine.

Immune system hurt

Researchers have found that meth abuse also wears on the immune system, making it more dangerous for men with HIV.

Some researchers have said the drug also adversely interacts with HIV medications.

Meth use and attendant HIV transmission has become such a concern in New York City that Gay Men's Health Crisis, one of the nation's largest gay AIDS/HIV groups, has launched a major education campaign there. The organization is putting up billboards, sending out mailings, sponsoring workshops and dispatching counselors into the community to talk about meth abuse and HIV.

"We want to cut the chain link between using crystal, impaired judgment, risky sex and HIV transmission," said Eric Altman, a GMHC associate director.

While no such methamphetamine education program is under way in Atlanta, AID Atlanta has launched a program that includes passing out condoms at gay clubs.

"I'm not telling them what to do as far as how many sex partners they have," said Michael Clifford, an HIV prevention specialist with AID Atlanta who visits the clubs. "What I am telling them — or asking them to consider and think about — is the way that they practice their sex, to protect themselves."

'Just one weekend'

Sprouse said several of his clients at Positive Impact believed they contracted HIV by having unsafe sex while they were high on meth.

One client was diagnosed with the virus after only one weekend of meth use and sex, he said. The man, whom Sprouse described as shy, churchgoing and in his mid-20s, told him he had had "very limited" sexual experience and had practiced only safe sex before that weekend.

"Some friends of his introduced him to Tina on a Thursday evening," Sprouse said. "He started using Tina that night and stopped on Monday morning. . . . He lost count over the weekend when he hit having sex with 12 men."

About a month later, the man "developed a flulike syndrome, went and got tested, and was HIV-positive," Sprouse said. "He came in clearly overwhelmed. In his mind he was thinking this was just one weekend. One weekend, and it has impacted him for the rest of his life."

By the end of last year, John, the HIV-positive man in Midtown, was using meth every day, a habit that cost him about $250 a week, and he had quit his job.

He also had stopped taking his HIV medications.

"I was like, 'I'm just going to let it take me down. I'm just going to keep doing it until it kills me.' "

He also was imagining voices. "They would repeat everything I thought. They would make fun of me."

One night at home, enraged at the voices in his head, John took a black marker and wrote — over and over — on a white leather chair, "They stole your mind."

He keeps the chair in his bedroom as a personal warning: Stay away from Tina.

Staff writer David Wahlberg contributed to this article.


TOPICS: Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: aids; homosexualagenda; homosexuals; meth; riskybehavior
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To: TheSpottedOwl
I grew up out in the rural parts of Alabama...and recently returned for a vacation. Meth is now in every corner of that county. Out of 60,000 residents...there are at least 1,500 people on meth and it continues to climb. I stood in a gas station, and the attendent was a meth-user...barely able to comprehend the amount of gas I pumped or how much cash he ought to hand back to me. The locals are all in a fury about this whole thing and the cops bust an occassional lab...but its a lost cause. For every lab they take down, they have to cough up $7k for a toxic waste team to come out and clean up the lab...all of which must come out of the county funds system. When they convict the guy, they never get the $7k back. Just 8 of the lab busts are enough to wipe out planned budget for each year.

When you look at the folks who get into the meth business...they all start out living and working like normal, and they all eventually have to move into house trailers or houses with their meth partners. Disagreements are commonplace within these living arrangements and assault or murder is becoming the norm for folks living in this atmosphere.

The best story I saw...was a 45-year old woman, mother of five kids, who became a meth user. She eventually attempted to kill her husband (slicing his throat while he was reclining on his easy chair)...and he later forgave her as she admitted her problem and allowed her back into the house (something a guy should never do). She stayed off meth for 3 weeks...and then went right back to the same crowd. After dealing with her for two years, the husband finally kicked her out. She comes over and visits the kids once a week, under supervision...but is still on meth and is really starting to show her age now. It is very doubtful that she will make it to 50. And the kids just look at her...a walking corpse.

Forget the drug war in Colombia...stop the worry about import of hard drugs...you have meth, and it will eventually desroy the heartland of America. If we were ever to "move heaven and earth"...now is the time to fix a problem before it becomes a major factor in American life.
61 posted on 04/18/2004 8:32:11 PM PDT by pepsionice
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To: oceanperch
Thanks for your honesty - your words should inspire people reading this thread! I know you are right. I also can attest to the fact that by the grace of God - which He freely gives, if one begs for that grace - even the most fallen, degraded and vice-addicted individual can become truly a "new person".

The fact that the "gay" activists and their minions spread the lie that "gays" can't change is one of their most grievous evils. They are trying to enchain and enslave thousands and millions of young people in hell with no hope of escape.

But, since God can and does speak to each and every one of His children, if someone wants to hear that Voice within, their life can change from night into day.

And this change is one we all need, whether sexual vice is our failure, or any other.
62 posted on 04/18/2004 8:33:20 PM PDT by little jeremiah (...men of intemperate minds can not be free. Their passions forge their fetters.)
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To: Wally_Kalbacken
Meth can destroy your life. And it leaves something to be desired as an aphrodisiac. I don't care if you're heterosexual or gay. STAY AWAY FROM IT.
63 posted on 04/18/2004 8:33:44 PM PDT by goldstategop (In Memory Of A Dearly Beloved Friend Who Lives On In My Heart Forever)
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To: little jeremiah
See, this is an excellent example of what I'm talking about..

Now back to work for me!

64 posted on 04/18/2004 8:34:07 PM PDT by AntiGuv (When the countdown hits zero - something's gonna happen..)
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To: usadave
I think Smith's belief is correct.

As sad as the situation is, your comment made me laugh. Me thinks the APA should not have let homosexual activism convince them to declassify homosexuality as a mental disorder.

65 posted on 04/18/2004 8:35:49 PM PDT by scripter (Thousands have left the homosexual lifestyle)
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To: Wally_Kalbacken
This is very strange.

I started speed at age 15 and was addicted to METH for many years and knew very few people who found it sexually stimulating.

Quite the opposite. Like Coke, Meth made maintaining an erection very difficult for most men. It made attempts to engage in sex frustrating and futile.

66 posted on 04/18/2004 8:36:38 PM PDT by Jorge
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To: cherry
It doesn't just sound terrible, dear; it is terrible.

the sooner some of these people meet their Creator , the better

Check out Matthew 7:1-5 if you want something to look forward to..

67 posted on 04/18/2004 8:38:22 PM PDT by AntiGuv (When the countdown hits zero - something's gonna happen..)
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To: AntiGuv
I am always up for a rational discussion, even if points of agreement are few. I don't appreciate snide comments, as though I needed an explanation of the meaning of the word "backwards".

P.S. I am neither a social Darwinist nor a religious fanatic.
68 posted on 04/18/2004 8:39:07 PM PDT by little jeremiah (...men of intemperate minds can not be free. Their passions forge their fetters.)
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To: Wally_Kalbacken
"It gives people a way to have sex for hours and hours and hours," said Smith, who grew up in Marietta and now lives in Decatur. "It's the greatest euphoria you can ever feel."

The only reason anybody has sex for hours and hours on meth is because it makes it almost impossible to get off.
Meth might be euphoria in many ways, but it is a dud when it comes to sex.

69 posted on 04/18/2004 8:40:23 PM PDT by Jorge
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To: little jeremiah
OK, sorry about that. I'm in a bit of a sour mood because I should be working at something and I can't seem to refocus on it. I didn't mean to be snippy.. :)
70 posted on 04/18/2004 8:41:55 PM PDT by AntiGuv (When the countdown hits zero - something's gonna happen..)
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To: cherry
My concern is that in the process of this reckless denouement - they are absorbing resources (effectively, tax dollars) which are constraining the budgets of taxpayer families who have to reduce expenditures they otherwise would have made on their children. The perversity is theirs to enjoy if the costs are all borne by the participants. But we know they're not. With all the news about the antiviral "cocktail" therapies - my suspicion is that a lot of these folks have been emboldened to take the risk - why not, if you come up positive there is a drug regimen which will keep you alive, but diseased, for years?

I have yet to see a recent analysis of the costs of healthcare for AIDS patients - but something tells me that a lot of it is on the taxpayer's nickel. In the early years, when there were not the AIDS specific drugs the end came quickly and I recall seeing estimates of just south of $100k from diagnosis to death. Today the time span of living with seropositivity is much longer, on average. How much does this cost and where are the costs falling?

Furthermore, if it was fair for the state's Attorneys General to sue the tobacco companies en masse to recover the impact of smoking on state expenditures for Medicaid/Medicare - who do we sue for the impact of this avoidable health care $ drain?

71 posted on 04/18/2004 8:42:20 PM PDT by Wally_Kalbacken (Seldom right, never in doubt!)
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To: AntiGuv
No prob. I'm always happy to have a debate with you!

We all have our moments.

;-)
72 posted on 04/18/2004 8:43:37 PM PDT by little jeremiah (...men of intemperate minds can not be free. Their passions forge their fetters.)
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To: scripter
Me thinks the APA should not have let homosexual activism convince them to declassify homosexuality as a mental disorder.

The APA ONLY declassified homosexuality as a mental disorder under pressure from the gay rights advocates.
There was absolutely NOTHING scientific about their decision.

73 posted on 04/18/2004 8:43:54 PM PDT by Jorge
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To: little jeremiah
Agree. We all must make choices daily and sometimes we miss it but go back and ask for forgiveness when we discover we have transgressed.

But for humans to be so decieved and turn to others and impose on them to except their sins is taking away freedom of choice for those who choose to live by God's word.

If the Gay lifestyle promotes freedom than that is a lie as they are imposing on my freedom of choice.

Actually that is true in many segmants of society but most choosing destructive life choices leave others alone.

I have never been pressured to accept other vices I have come accross. Been exposed to just about everything and never had to except what is being offered.

I even have dealt with well meaning Christians who insist being married or having a husband is a must for all Christians. This is just not true.

Excuse the expression but it is ok to be an "old maid" by choice.

74 posted on 04/18/2004 9:43:45 PM PDT by oceanperch (King Vanity Parking Only all others will be towed)
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To: Wally_Kalbacken
This article is BS!
Meth abuse elevates HIV crisis for gays
NO, anal sex elevates crisis for gays.
Whenever he had sex, he wanted meth. Whenever he was high on meth, he wanted sex.
The fool was buggering when he was straight too!
Gay health organizations in San Francisco and New York have launched public awareness campaigns warning about meth use and HIV transmission through risky sexual behavior.
Oh, what a farce! It is the risky sexual behavior..period!

And let's not forget that meth is legally available with a prescription as Desoxyn.

75 posted on 04/18/2004 9:55:05 PM PDT by philman_36
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To: cherry
Yes it is right up there with child molesters IMO.

We need to stand up to them with our views because it is our kids who they are warping or trying to.

And it is our homes the meth heads are burglarizing at random to get drug money.

You know this article is identical to the last stories in the last season of Queer as Folk. Identical.

We are watching it tonight the premeire so I can pick it apart as this show gave my son the immpression that being Gay seems fun, untill I took him on a tour of real life gays and their world. He now understands how tv is a misconception of reality.

Just like the soft porno stuff on tv.

Hey I was twenty something once and bought into the idea that drinking beer is what you do along with every activity and it makes you attractive.

Then I saw what drunks in real life are like and relized the idea of tv is one thing marketing to sell. Duh.

Now the only tv ad I can say I succumb to in the last decade is Vorizen "Can you here me now?" hook, line and sinker can't wait to end that useless spendy contract. Where we live if I had an E merg in travel we are out of range in the coast range.
76 posted on 04/18/2004 10:03:11 PM PDT by oceanperch (King Vanity Parking Only all others will be towed)
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To: TOUGH STOUGH
The legality of these bathhouses only proves the political power of homosexuals.

I'm not sure bathhouses have anything to do with any political power of gays.

They're simply able to legally dress them up as no worse than hetero bars/clubs attached to cheap hotels where pick ups are par for the course.

77 posted on 04/18/2004 10:09:17 PM PDT by Jorge
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To: pepsionice
It is like that all over America.

In Salem Oregon a news story went through a neighborhood showing all the boarded up homes, meth labs. Pathetic.

Even my dear and oldest friend whom I have known her son since he was 5yrs old is on probation for meth problems and he stole thousands from mommy while she worked trusting him with her ATM card. Sad.

My son grew up without a father because I refused to be invovled with a druggee. My son's Dad is clean 10yrs now but the mental brain damage that stuff did will never improve.
78 posted on 04/18/2004 10:23:02 PM PDT by oceanperch (King Vanity Parking Only all others will be towed)
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To: AntiGuv
why, if true, is methamphetamine use so disproportionally prevalent amongst gays...

Uh...AntiGuv? These guys aren't getting AIDS because they use meth.

If you want to ask a useful question, how about, "What will it take for these people to adopt a responsible lifestyle instead of a degenerate one?"
79 posted on 04/18/2004 10:23:31 PM PDT by hinckley buzzard
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To: oceanperch
Have you ever read about the Desert Fathers? There is a famous one (can't remember his name, google will tell you everything). I read a book about them a few years ago, with a lot of quotes from their writings. They were a fascinating group of mostly hermits and monks, living in the Egyptian desert (IIRC) from about (IIRC) 100AD to 300AD. They were very holy, lived a life of celibacy, poverty and renunciation, and actually meditated and prayed on ropes with knots, like beads or a rosary.

There were some Desert Mothers, too!

A life of chaste singlehood is infinitely better than being married to someone who has no faith in God or tries to derail your relationship with Him.
80 posted on 04/18/2004 10:24:14 PM PDT by little jeremiah (...men of intemperate minds can not be free. Their passions forge their fetters.)
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