Crystal, Ice, Tina, Chrissy, Speed, Tweak, Meth, Glass, Crank, and Chalk. Crystal Methamphetamine is a highly addictiv
Ice Tina Chrissy speed use is on the rise in New Brunswick communities, causing devastating effects on the health and safety of individuals who live in them.
Crystal meth use, and its wider effects are felt in many communities throughout North America.
Inexpensive to acquire, crystal meth is manufactured using pseudoephedrine or ephedrine, commonly found in cold medicine. It is often cooked with other common household products never intended for human ingestion such as nail polish remover, fertilizer, battery acid, lantern fuel, antifreeze and drain cleaner.
It is a crystalline drug that can be swallowed in pill form, snorted (inhaled through the nose), injected with a needle or smoked. The powder is odourless and easily dissolves in water.
Street names for the drug include tweak, meth, glass, ice, Tina, Chrissy, crank, chalk, jib and speed.
Acting as a stimulant, the drug induces a sense of euphoria, confidence and hyperactive energy and audio and visual hallucinations in the user. A “high” typically lasts six to eight hours and sometimes up to 24 hours. Because it is highly concentrated, it is extremely easy to become addicted after the first use.
Younger experimental users of other drugs such as cannabis can become addicted to crystal meth through unknowingly purchasing meth-laced cannabis products on the street. Urinalysis tests confirm some of Horizon’s Addictions & Mental Health clientele became addicted this way.
The drug is a poison that starts to damage the body as users try to regain that sense of well-being from the first high. Repeated use induces psychosis and evokes violent, aggressive behaviour and associated health issues such as serious infections, malnutrition, depression, epilepsy symptoms, respiratory issues, liver and kidney damage, irreversible brain damage, heart damage, Meth sores, or open wounds and abscesses caused from incessant picking at the skin.
Ice Tina Chrissy speed use has a much wider affect beyond the individual user. Suicides, mental illness, shared needles, risky sexual behaviour, crime, violence, child neglect and abuse are among the secondary effects in communities where crystal meth is present.
Treatment for crystal meth addiction is notoriously difficult. Typical relapse rates are 61% within one year after treatment and 25% during years 2-5.