What is Crystal? | Crystal Shatters | FAQ | Words of Advice | Supporters | Resources
Words of Advice
1. If you don't use, don't start
Crystal meth is highly addictive and drug dependency can develop quickly, even if you think you can control your use.
Despite popular perception, most gay/bi men do NOT use crystal. In Chicago, 90% of gay/bi men do not use crystal.
You can have a great, satisfying sex life without crystal. Most gay/bi men do.
Using crystal regularly can lead to tooth decay, undesirable weight loss, paranoia, brain damage, memory loss, and impotence. It impairs sexual choices and greatly increases your risk of acquiring or transmitting HIV or other STDs.
Get tested for HIV and/or STDs every three months.
2. If you do use, seek help to reduce or stop using.
See the Resources Section for local services to help you stop or reduce your use, or receive other important health services.
3. If stopping isn't an option, act consistently to reduce your sexual risk and protect your general well-being as described below.
Before you get high:
Plan for sexual safety. Decide how and with whom you want to have sex. Make a commitment to disclose/ask about HIV/STD status and use condoms once you're high. If you have difficulty following through on these plans once you are high, know there is help available.
Counseling and drugs that can prevent HIV infection after unsafe sex (non-occupational post-exposure prophylaxis) are available in Chicago.
For bottoms, insert a female condom before getting high or leaving your house for sex.
Pack plenty of condoms and lube. Put them where you will see them once you're high.
While you are high:
Eat, drink extra water or Gatorade, and sleep. Ensure and Power Bars are good sources of nutrition if you don't feel like eating.
You CAN play safely and use condoms -- even while you're high.
Prolonged crystal sex leads to excessive friction and can cause condoms to dry out more quickly or break. Change condoms every hour and with each sex partner.
Use more water-based lubricant than usual. Too much lube is almost enough.
Crystal use in combination with other drugs such as Viagra, poppers, and Ecstasy can cause serious and even life threatening health problems.
"Booty bumping" (keistering) is NOT a safer way to do crystal. It can seriously damage your bowels or anus. This makes anal sex very painful and increases your chance of getting HIV and/or another STD like syphilis.
If you're using crystal and you don't take these precautions consistently, your chances of staying HIV negative are slim, especially if you inject.
Injecting Crystal:
If you don't inject, don't start. Reject offers from sex partners to inject you or to show you how. Injecting greatly increases your chances of HIV, STDs, hepatitis C, abscesses, other soft tissue infections, and social/sexual rejection.
Injecting crystal puts you at greater risk for acquiring, or transmitting, HIV.
Use a new, sterile syringe every time you inject or divide drugs. You can acquire sterile syringes at the needle exchange or at pharmacies without a prescription.
Do not share syringes, cookers, or other paraphernalia with other users or sex partners.
If sterile needles are not available, soaking needles in bleach can kill HIV (3 step method followed by thorough water rinsing). Bleach is not proven effective against hepatitis B or C.
HIV-positive men and crystal use:
Research shows that using crystal meth often leads to higher viral loads, faster HIV progression, worsened immune function, and increased neurological damage.
Using crystal does NOT increase T-cells or boost your immune system. These are myths. In fact, crystal can trash your immune system whether you have HIV or not.
Your chances of successfully managing your HIV get better the sooner you stop using crystal.
Crystal can have bad interactions with many HIV medications.
While you're high, you may forget to take your meds or follow food and water guidelines. This can make your meds less effective and increase your viral load. Kidney stones are also common.
Be honest with your doctor about your drug use. If you are uncomfortable talking to your doctor or feel it is difficult to be honest with him/her, get a new doctor. Talk about whether taking HIV medications while you're still using is right for you.
Crystal use is not the answer to feelings of shame, anger, fear, loneliness, or depression. While crystal may provide temporary relief, these feelings will resume and intensify when the high is gone.
Gaining peer support from other HIV-positive people and service organizations can help ease anxieties that frequently affect people living with HIV/AIDS.
4.The good news is - you (and the ones you love) CAN recover.
Public Health - Seattle & King County has just released a wonderful new crystal relapse prevention booklet for gay men. It was produced in collaboration with a local, self-organizing group of gay men in Seattle recovery called Strength Over Speed. They sponsor peer-facilitated recovery support groups and were willing to share their names, faces, and stories to help destigmatize crystal recovery and reach out to other men who may be struggling to get off or stay off speed. We thank them for sharing this great resource!
Also from the public health department in Seattle and King County, "When Your Partner Has a Drug or Alcohol Problem" offers insight and advice on how to support your partner, yourself, and your relationship through this difficult time.
More Advice
Learn more about the controversial Prometa treatment protocol below.
BE SMART! To be an informed consumer of treatment services, we recommend you asking the following questions of any treatment provider.
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You claim a ___% success rate. What is your definition of success?
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What are the potential risks of your treatment, and what precautions or support services do you have in place in case I experience any of the risks you outline?
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Are the methods used in your treatment supported by the National Institute of Drug Abuse or the National Institute of Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism?
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How many of the people going through your treatment have been able to remain clean after 90 days/six months/one year? Do you have outcome studies to support your claims?
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What kind of ongoing support can I expect to receive once I have completed your treatment? Will I have to pay for ongoing treatment or support once I have completed?
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You have shown me testimonials from people for whom the treatment worked. For whom has the treatment not worked, and why was it not successful? What have you done to help these people for whom treatment has not been successful?
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Will you be willing to talk to my doctor/therapist/psychiatrist/social worker about your treatment protocol?
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Are you willing to work collaboratively with my doctor/therapist/psychiatrist/social worker?
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Thanks to Dr. Kevin Osten of Valeo for putting together these questions
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Resources on Prometa
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Click here for the text from the Letter to the Editor published in the Chicago Free Press, Gay Chicago and Windy City Times regarding being a smart consumer of treatment.
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Click here for local and other news articles on the controversial Prometa treatment protocol for alcohol and meth addiction.
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Click here for a NY Post story, 'Addicted to $$" on Hythiam and Prometa dated April 10, 2006.
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Click here for "Staying Skeptical of Addiciton Treatment" from STATS at George Mason Univeristy.
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Click here for "Perspectives on Hythiam's Prometa Treatment for Addiction" from the fall 2006 quarterly newsletter of the California Society in Addiction Medicine (PDF)
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Click here for the MSNBC.com story "Meth, cocaine 'remedy' hit market" dated February 5, 2007.
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Click here for "Effectiveness of Prometa Treatment Protocol in Pierce County Drug Courts" - issued November 14, 2007. Click here for Appendices 1-4. Click here for Appendices 5-8.
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Click here forTheStreet.com's Biotech-Stock Mailbag item on Hythiam dated November 24, 2007.
- Jim Pickett of the Chicago Task Force on Substance Use and Abuse appeared on The Morning Show with Mike and Juliet (Fox) December 13, 2007 to talk about Prometa. Click here for "Medical Cure Miracles?" Click here for the discussion that followed in the Green Room.










