Police detox at clinic for exposure to meth

Exercise, nutrition and sweating are all part of program

Published: Thursday, Nov. 8 2007 12:12 a.m. MST

OREM — The towel reeked of sweat and ammonia.

That is what police officers who come to this nondescript clinic purge from their bodies while undergoing treatment for exposure to chemicals found in methamphetamine labs.

"You literally sweat these things out of your body," Weber County sheriff's deputy Mike Wells said Tuesday. "I had stuff coming out through my eyes. They'd burn, and at night, I'd have pieces of stuff in my eyes."

The Bio-Cleansing Centers of America has opened a facility here that caters to police officers who have spent years battling Utah's methamphetamine problem and are beginning to pay for it with their lives. Officers have reported lung problems, chronic headaches, difficulty sleeping, acid reflux and joint pain, among other ailments. Some have reported bizarre cancers.

Police who battled the meth epidemic in the late 1990s are reporting the most symptoms. The American Detoxification Foundation's Sandra Lucas said she has a list of 100 police officers suffering from the problems.

A former South Jordan police sergeant, who asked not to be identified because he still works undercover, has been going into meth labs for years.

"I've had high exposure to labs," he said. "I had a vent bag blow up in my face and high exposure to chemicals."

After suffering from severe sleep problems, blurred vision, liver problems and shortness of breath, it was another police officer who referred him to the clinic. Tuesday was his first day.

"I've been on vitamins for six weeks," he said. "Any medications they want you off of."

The program works in three steps: exercise, nutrition and supplements, and sweating. The clinic offers a sauna in which officers spend hours just sweating out the toxic chemicals in their bodies. For a SWAT team officer, the 43 days he spent undergoing the detox program was "challenging."

"It's a little bit strange, and I was skeptical of it working," the undercover SWAT officer said.

His medical doctors took a look at his symptoms and prescribed antidepressants that wouldn't help, he said. After another officer told him about the clinic, he came here.

"I feel great now," he said.

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