Missouri man who chronicled methamphetamine use dead at 35

By Jim Suhr, Associated Press Writer
Tuesday, March 27, 2007 | 1 comment(s)

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ST. LOUIS - A southeast Missouri man who drew widespread attention for his documentary about how methamphetamine ravaged his body has died, but was optimistic at the end that his film would deter others from using the highly addictive stimulant.

“He was extremely satisfied, wanting to do more in getting the word out and showing kids what meth harm does. We didn't get to that point,” his father, Jack Bridges, said in a telephone interview hours after his son Shawn's death Monday at age 35. “He didn't want anyone to go through what he did.”

Shawn Bridges died shortly after 11:30 a.m. at a hospital in Cape Girardeau, Mo., his father by his side.

“We'll still be trying to drive home the point that these drugs are poison, and that people using them are heading the same place Shawn has gone,” Jack Bridges said.

Shawn Bridges gained publicity last year for “No More Sunsets,” a 29-minute film shot by a former southern Illinois television videographer at the request of Bridges, a former trucker who sought to immortalize his slow, agonizing decline.

By his family's account, Bridges already had died at least twice well before Monday, his heart so ravaged over the years by meth - a concoction that can include toxic chemicals such as battery acid, drain cleaner and fertilizer - that it stopped and had to be shocked back into beating.

The documentary shows Bridges largely bedridden, his constant companions a catheter and feeding tube he needed because of the poor decisions he admitted making.

“I'd say he's got a 34-year-old body on the outside with 70- to 80-year-old man on the inside,” his father told the AP in May of last year.

Roughly 28,000 people sought treatment for meth addiction across the country in 1993, accounting for nearly 2 percent of admissions for drug-abuse care, according to the federal Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration. But just a decade later, the meth-related admissions numbered nearly 136,000.

Family members have said Shawn Bridges had been haunted by the dreary day in 1976 when his younger brother Jason, barely a year old, died in a car wreck. Shawn was just 4 and nowhere near the accident but inexplicably blamed himself, his father has said.

Chip Rossetti, who filmed the documentary, said 500 to 600 copies have been sold, with copies sent everywhere from Australia to Canada. Bridges also was profiled on German public television.

Rossetti said Monday he plans a sequel, chronicling Bridge's final year and testimonials by people touched by his awareness push.
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Blair Anderson wrote on Mar 27, 2007 6:36 PM:

Dying of methamphetamine is more a function of the unintended consequences its prohibition than of its clinical effects. Such are the irony's of drug policy that fails to measure externalities of the policy against the pharmacology risks associated with both chronic and inexperienced users, especially absent credible drug information & education, normative guidelines or warrantable product. Meth may be a bad drug, but the policy is amplifying any inherent dangers to self and others and elevates harm/risk to community. Drug by drug analysis also fails to address drug substitution and market forces. There is for example considerable weight of evidence to suggest if everyone smoked pot and displaced all alchohol consumption - it would save billions and untold heartache. Such hypothetical models are very instructive and deserve wider consideration in drug policy formulation. The highly reputed Medical Research Council latest report (Lancet) introduces the concept of having drugs catagorised by harms, not criminal sanction as a rational move towards a more enlightened and harm minimising policy. Such policy will never stop ALL incidences like the above example, but it will reduce both severity of outcomes and frequency of consequences. And that can only be a good thing. Blair Anderson, Director, Educators for Sensible Drug Policy. http://www.efsdp.org


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