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Welcome to July 2010 'News of Hope'

Contents
• Dentists May Be First to Detect Methamphetimine Use
• College Students Today are Less Empathetic Today
• Prescription Drug Use has Gone Sky High - DON'T NEGLECT 
   PREVENTION - Book LEGACY OF HOPE for coming school year
• Hooked on Hookah: More Carcinogenic than Cigarettes?
• 79% Say Stress is a Fact of Life -- Is it?



Pictured Above:
June was a month of delightful experiences including:
Pic 1 & 2: So.Carolina Dept of Education - Education and Business Summit where Legacy of Hope opened the event. Pic 1 - Susie with accomplished technology students receiving awards; Pic 2 - Susie with Wofford Sullivan from the Office of Career and Technology Education who coordinated speakers for the event!
Pic 3: Lively students at the Washington State 4-H Conference where Susie delivered the closing keynote.
Pic 4: Susie with Jan Klein - Washington State 4-H Teen Leadership Coordinator and enthusiastic proponent of 4-H!

Index to past Legacy Newsletters by topic.

        

Dentists may be First to Detect Methamphetamine Use

Jul 01, 2010
CADCA (www.cadca.org)

The National Institutes of Health's National Institute on Drug Abuse has granted the University of California, Los Angeles School of Dentistry $1.86 million to study the oral and dental consequences of methamphetamine use, since dentists are often the first to detect if a patient is a meth user.

Long-term use of the drug can lead to devastating medical, psychological and social consequences, including mood disturbances, violent behavior, an increased risk of contracting infectious diseases such as HIV/AIDS and hepatitis, and higher rates of crime, unemployment, and child abuse and neglect.

It can also result in a uniquely accelerated form of extensive dental disease known as "meth mouth." While case reports and media attention surrounding the creation and abuse of methamphetamine abound, very little is known about the epidemiology of "meth mouth" or the underlying mechanisms that contribute to accelerated dental decay. Thus far, the lack of a knowledge base regarding the drug's oral health consequences has prevented dental professionals from recognizing the disease in its early stages and developing best practices for treating the condition.

However, new research supports the idea that dentists could be the key to identifying covert users — and getting them both the medical and dental treatment they sorely need.
Dr. Vivek Shetty, a professor of oral and maxillofacial surgery, is the principal investigator of the project. For the four-year study, he aims to build on his previous research, which provided the first systematic evidence of higher rates of oral disease among methamphetamine abusers.

In a paper published in the March 2010 issue of the Journal of the American Dental Association, Shetty and his co-authors reported that overt dental disease is a key distinguishing medical co-morbidity in methamphetamine users who otherwise present as generally healthy individuals, especially in the early stages of their drug abuse.


To read article or learn more about CADCA

_________________________________________________________

Let LEGACY OF HOPE® help Address Skyrocketing Prescription Drug Abuse
In the news in a June 22, 2010 JOIN TOGETHER article:

Nonmedical use of prescription pain relievers rose 111 percent between 2004 and 2008, according to a new study by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), Reuters reported June 17.

The study showed that emergency-room visits increased from 144,644 in 2004 to 305,885 in 2008; the trend cut across age and gender lines. Oxycodone, hydrocodone, and methadone were the three most-abused drugs, rising 152 percent, 123 percent, and 73 percent, respectively, during the study timeframe.


Funding for prevention in schools is down, but substance abuse is up. Prevention is proven to lower use. It is the INCREASE in messages about consequences and dangers of various use and abuse that helps our kids CHOOSE "No."

HELP youth "CHOOSE NO!"

LEGACY OF HOPE® school assemblies, interaction with students with problems, and parent/community education programs DO send the right message.

Contact us if 2010-2011 programming NOW. Prevent another child from ending up in the emergency room or worse from prescription drug abuse

Call at 800-707-1977 or email.

For more about LEGACY OF HOPE®


 


 
                         

College Students Today are Less Empathetic than College Students of the Past

According to writer Ann Pietrangelo on www.care2.com, "College students today are less empathetic than college students of the past. At least that’s what University of Michigan researchers have concluded."

The results were based 72 different studies of American college students conducted between 1979 and 2009 and involved 14,000 students.

As Pietrangelo shared, "Today’s students were found to possess about 40 percent less empathy than students of 20 or 30 years ago, with the biggest drop coming after the year 2000."

What is the impact of less empathy in today's young adults and youth? Certainly, it is not uncommon to hear adults complain of the self-centeredness of adolescents and even 20-something''s. How about the rampant sense of entitlement? A lack of empathy creates relationship problems, poor customer service in the marketplace, and a sense of isolation and agitation in those less empathetic.

Empathy is a learned character trait. We aren't born thinking about others welfare or trying to understand their emotional circumstances. Quite the opposite. Babies are non-empathetic to exhausted parents. It's feed me, change me, focus on me. Empathy begins when the 4-year-old bites his little sister and Mom explains what it feels like, that it hurts! Empathy begins to grow when Mom tells 6 year-old to see the tears in a friend's eye because they took their toy away, and 6-year-old learns to say, "I'm sorry."

But where do kids learn empathy if Moms aren't around, and it's violence-based media and cartoons that feed their understanding of relationships?

Pietrangelo asks, "Who or what is to blame for the apparent loss of empathy? After all, the study participants are the offspring of those more empathetic college kids from the 70’s and 80’s."

She, too, sees violence on television, in the movies, and in video games as desensitizing youth to the plight of others. Furthermore, we are living in an online social networking world which 'encourages an ''all about Me'' attitude.'

Our reliance on communication through snippets of text and tweets creates a false sense of intimacy that contributes further to a lack of empathy. It's not unusual for couples to break-up via texting or for adolescent friends to put revealing photos of a teen on YouTube or sexting on their phones. Where is the empathy there? It is so easy to do thoughtless gestures at the touch of a keypad today. Perhaps youth are spurred on by a world mesmerized by the power of technology. This infatuation with technology has caused us to forget and/or ignore the human cost of revealing too much or of spreading mean gossip.

In truth, it may simply be the perpetrator's need for attention in a world that moves its attention every few minutes from one reality participant, athlete, music or movie star to another.

Perhaps we have created a lack of empathy in young people through a naive neglect of their as a result of divorces and bigger blended families, financial stress, and parents exhausted by an unempathetic work world.

Or maybe it comes from the exact opposite - affluence that allowed an over-abundance of toys, "I am Special" T''s, and parents running interference for a child's negative behaviors at school or in society to avoid "ruining their future."

Pietrangelo writes that the “Me Generation” is a common label given to today’s young adults. "Older generations view them as narcissistic to the extreme." She also prods us to ask how empathetic are WE as adults compared to our younger selves as well.

She states a truth and that is, that "empathy is not about weakness; it is about strength and intelligence."

To test yourself, the University of Michigan press release includes a link to an empathy test. After answering the questions, you can compare your results to the college-age students who took the test. http://umichisr.qualtrics.com/SE/?SID=SV_bCvraMmZBCcov52&SVI

NOTES:
Writer Ann Pietrangelo embraces the concept of personal responsibility for health and wellness. As a person living with multiple sclerosis, she combines a healthy lifestyle and education with modern medicine, and seeks to provide information and support to others.

Susie teaches youth Emotional Wisdom - empathy, compassion, and emotional responsibility.


          

Hooked on Hookah: Study Raises Questions About Water Pipe Smoking

From CADCA - May 27, 2010

A new study, "Water Pipe Smoking Among North American Youths," published in the June print issue of Pediatrics, the peer-reviewed, scientific journal of the American Academy of Pediatrics, describes the demographic characteristics of water pipe users. And what they found could blow supporters of this leisure activity out of the water.

Using data collected from questionnaires sent to 1,208 people ages 18 to 24 in Montreal, Canada, researchers found that 23 percent had used a water pipe during the previous year.

Also known as hookah, shisha, goza, narghile, and hubble bubble, water pipe smoking is a centuries-old tradition in Arabic societies that involves smoking tobacco by using an upright device with a small platform where tobacco is burned, a metal body, a base half-filled with water, and a hose with a mouthpiece for inhaling. But what researchers found was water pipes were more popular among people who were younger, male, speaking English, not living with their parents and who had a higher household income.

In a technical report accompanying last year’s American Academy of Pediatrics tobacco policy statement, the use of tobacco, in any form, can lead to addiction, significant morbidity, and premature death. Their statement also cites tobacco that is smoked through a hookah or water pipe. Tobacco smoke contains thousands of toxic chemicals, including many known carcinogens.

However, water pipe smoke contains nicotine, carbon monoxide and carcinogens, and may contain greater amounts of tar and heavy metals than cigarette smoke. The organization of 60,000 primary care pediatricians, pediatric medical subspecialists and pediatric surgical specialists says there is no safe method, level, frequency, or duration of tobacco use or exposure.

Hookah study project coordinator Erika Dugas has been following participants for a decade, since the age of 12. Now into their ‘20s, the participants were asked for the first time about their hookah use and the results surprised researchers.

In an interview with Coalitions Online, Dugas said water pipe use was markedly higher among participants who had smoked cigarettes, had used other tobacco products, had drunk alcohol, and had engaged in binge drinking, had smoked marijuana, or had used other illicit drugs in the previous year, the study reported.

As the prevalence of cigarette smoking declines in Montreal, the United States and all over North America, smoking water pipes is becoming more popular. The study authors suggest that the growing popularity of water pipes may be due in part to perceptions that they are safer than cigarettes.

“People don’t really understand what it is. We have to make people realize what they are putting into their lungs,” Dugas said.

What’s worse, researchers say, is that hookah tobacco is not regulated by the Canadian Food Inspection Agency or the US Food and Drug Administration. Dugas and her team hope this research prompts policy makers in both countries to take an interest in it and regulate the product.

In a hookah water pipe, smoldering coals are used to slowly burn a mixture of tobacco, molasses, fruit, and flavoring. Hookah fruit flavors are especially appealing to youth and are sending the wrong message, Dugas said.


This work was supported by the Canadian Cancer Society.

Read full article and more at CADCA website.



79% Say Stress is just a fact of Life... But is it?


The vast majority of us know we have stress and that is can 

make us sick - physically, emotionally and mentally. People easily admit having reactions to stress including fatigue, headaches, neckaches, backaches, stomach distress and more.

However, though 69% of people surveyed recognized the benefits of mental health support and stress management, only 7% are seeking help to cope in the past year. Why? Maybe down deep we believe that worry will control future outcomes. Maybe we think we are supposed to be able to "handle it all" and that getting help is a sign of failure or defeat. Perhaps we''ve been taught that seeking help means we''re weak. Or just maybe we are frogs in a pot of society''s water and in denial that it is coming to a boil!

According to Ariel''s AbodeNews, here''s what''s stressing us out:
Work - 74%
Money - 73%
Workload - 66%
Children - 66%
Family Responsibilities - 60%

It is said that the definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over and expecting a different result.
Try something different - try PEACE and SERENITY and see how you like it!

Contact us for more info, to book a Workshop or purchase the De-Stress for Success® System


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Contact us
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Susie Vanderlip, CPAE, CSP - Speakers Hall of Fame inductee
Ken Vanderlip, Ph.D. - Clinical Psychologist

 

 

From all of us at LEGACY ...
Susie Vanderlip, CSP, CPAE - Ken Vanderlip, PhD 
800-707-1977

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