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prevention news!
News of Hope email. |
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| Welcome to
our January, 2005 "News of
Hope" newsletter! |
| 2005 is Alive
and Kickin'! |
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We are on
top of the issues, ready to make
a difference and empower you to
do the same!
The prevention, intervention and
recovery worlds are merging with
everyday life as more and more
people get out of denial and seek
legitimate solutions. We are
excited about this new year.
The book will be out soon and
feedback from professional editors
and publishing consultants are
telling us that the book has
already helped THEM as parents
deal with their own teenagers.
One editors got so engrossed
in the content, they lost track
of editing! So, we're confident
you'll find insights and stories
that not only touch your heart
and feed your soul, but actually
help you cope with a teen in
difficult times.
We are working on new products
that will "change the thinking"
of teens so that they will want
to seek healthy choices. We
are in collaboration with The
Change Companies and exploring
customization of INTERACTIVE
JOURNALING to be used in groups
of teens at schools, clubs,
detention and environs yet to
be defined. More information
to come in future newsletters.
In addition, Susie will be
attending the CADCA Conference
in Washington D.C., January
10-13th and bring back plenty
of insights for you in future
newsletters. (CADCA is the Community
Anti-Drug Coaltion of America
- the premiere organization
for coordinating, educating
and lobbying on behalf of community
prevention organizations). More
and more, the focus is including
increased availablity of rehab.
If you plan to attend the CADCA
Conference and would like to
participate in our "Focus
Group" on Interactive Journaling,
let us know asap with an email.
Lastly, this New Year brings
opportunities for you to address
two of the most significant
emotional concerns that thousands
of teens shared with us on our
surveys in 2004:
DEPRESSION and STRESS
Up to 40% of 10th graders in
everyday high schools wanted
support for depression and stress.
Give us a call to discuss our
De-Stress for Success component,
designed to give teens more
success in school and to give
youth and their parents more
open, patient and satisfying
communication - what more could
you hope for!
January's newsletter is designed
to show you that prevention
is HOT! PLUS some TIPS to use
each and every day as part of
your NEW YEAR'S RESOLUTIONS!
And DON'T MISS THE WEBLINKS!
These are terrific web resources.
OH, THE PICTURE, YOU ASK? Guess
where we were off to in December?
A spontaneous trip down under!
HAPPY NEW YEAR!
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| JANUARY NEWSLETTER
INCLUDES: |
| * |
ER
Doctors Screening for Alcohol |
| * |
Keeping
Prevention in Step with
Technology |
| * |
Hiding
Drug Use from Docs can be
Risky |
| * |
Ten
Drug and Alcohol Policies
that Save Lives! |
|
Visit
us at our website for how to use
LEGACY OF HOPE in your school
and community!
|
|
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More ER Doctors Screening for
Alcohol |
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| A growing
number of doctors are screening
patients for alcohol use, focusing
especially on people involved
in car crashes. For
the screening, emergency personnel
ask patients about their drinking
behavior. Doctors then have
a conversation with patients
who said they consumed alcohol
prior to their emergency-room
visit.
A growing
number of health experts are
using the emergency-room visit
as a "teachable moment"
to identify people with alcohol
problems and direct them to
resources where they can receive
the help they need.
"It's
a prime opportunity to reach
people at risk," said Dr.
Gail D'Onofrio, an emergency-room
physician at Yale-New Haven
Hospital in Connecticut. "Many
people are young adults, and
they don't use primary care,
and they don't have insurance."
Research
indicates that nearly a quarter
of the people who come to an
emergency room with some kind
of trauma are intoxicated.
-From the
New York Times |
|
| Keeping Prevention
in Step with Technology |
| The
alcohol and other drug prevention
community has made some strides
in getting information out on
the Internet, but competing messages
from the alcohol industry and
others still hog much of the bandwidth,
according to Eric Helmuth, director
of Internet services at Join Together.
Nearly
9 of 10 adolescents go online,
and about 10 percent of youths
aged 9 to 18 report having visited
a drug-prevention website at
least once, according to a report
from the federal Office of National
Drug Control Policy (ONDCP)
-- a figure that has not changed
over the years despite investment
in more sophisticated online
resources.
Meanwhile,
however, the alcohol industry
recently doubled its annual
spending on Internet banner
ads, shelling out $21.6 million
for about 50,000 such ads in
2002 alone. And a Fall 2003
study by the Center on Alcohol
Marketing and Youth (CAMY) estimated
that overall, 13 percent of
visitors to websites maintained
by alcohol companies were underage,
with a few sites like the popular
Bacardi.com receiving up to
60 percent of their traffic
from people under the age of
21.
The alcohol
industry, in particular, has
been successful in driving traffic
to its website by offering "trinkets
and trash " -- features
such as screensavers, cartoons,
music, and contests -- similar
to past real-world tobacco and
alcohol marketing campaigns
featuring baseball hats, t-shirts,
and other youth-friendly items.
Helmuth
describes the Internet as a
"native environment"
for youth, who surf effortlessly
between downloading music, using
Instant Messenger (IM) to communicate
with friends, and researching
topics for school or fun. More
than half of youth surveyed
say they go online to help them
find out what's cool in fashion
and music, for example.
Parental
controls are of limited effectiveness
in blocking youth access to
objectionable content, especially
given the growing number of
places that youth can access
the Internet. "The Internet
by its nature is difficult to
control: information wants to
be free, and each generation
of youth is more Internet-savvy,"
notes Helmuth.
"Will
we match pro-drug and alcohol-industry
websites? No," says Helmuth.
"Even if we had the same
money, we are not going to be
as cool and enticing as the
'dark side.'" But he says,
the same aspects of the online
world that make it dangerous
-- such as anonymity and freedom
of information -- can work to
the advantage of the prevention
community.
"We
need to develop next-generation
online assessment and intervention
tools that help kids 'too cool'
to talk to an adult, who have
a variety of issues, from curiosity
to harmful use to early dependence,"
says Helmuth. "We must
meet this very Internet-savvy
audience in cyberspace with
interactive content that goes
beyond educating younger kids
about the negative effects of
drinking or drugs."
Some promising
examples of this deeper interaction
do exist, he notes. A number
of colleges, for instance, are
using Web-based alcohol education
and intervention programs to
teach incoming freshmen about
the dangers of alcohol use and
screen for signs of dependency
among new students.
He also
suggests other potential avenues
for online prevention research
and development. "Can we
engage youth in peer-to-peer
social marketing via chat rooms
or IM? What about online support
groups for youth? It may or
may not be effective, but we
have to find out."
Helmuth
advises prevention groups to
use their website as a 'flytrap'
-- "a golden opportunity
to engage the right people in
a relationship, because they
have sought you out." Prominently
offering an e-mail newsletter
on the home page is an especially
effective way to build a relationship,
and has the advantages of being
easy to produce, scalable, fast
and flexible, simple to forward
to others, and excellent for
driving traffic to your website.
Helmuth also recommends that
groups with a significant membership
base consider working with an
online customer-relationship
management (CRM) firm to better
understand and target their
audience.
"Most
people involved in prevention
really don't do a lot of advocacy,
even though we all believe in
it. We are, by and large, not
making much headway," he
continues. "We must figure
out how to recruit a much larger
constituency, and the Internet
is the best way to do it."
-From
JoinTogether.org
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| Helpful
Prevention Websites: |
|
|
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Hiding Drug Use from Docs Could
Be Risky |
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| People
who consume alcohol or use illegal
drugs could face complications
with routine surgical procedures,
such as wisdom-tooth extraction,
if they don't tell their oral
or maxillofacial surgeon about
their drug use. "Illicit
drugs and anesthesia can mix
in some potentially hazardous
ways," said Sue Carlisle,
Ph.D., M.D., chief of anesthesia
and perioperative care at San
Francisco General Hospital in
California. "Since few
abusers of controlled substances
readily admit drug use to their
doctors, it's important for
OMSs to recognize the signs
and symptoms of drug abuse and
be prepared to intervene."
According
to Carlise, the signs and symptoms
of alcohol and other drug misuse
include unusual changes in blood
pressure or heart rate, unexpected
flushing of the skin, and exaggerated
reaction to anesthetic drugs.
Since
many patients are hesitant to
report drug use to doctors,
Carlise recommended that OMSs
elicit information through non-threatening
questions, such as "Do
you smoke?" Those questions
could lead into inquiries like,
"Do you use any non-prescription
drugs or street drugs?"
"If
you work up to it gradually,
patients will usually tell the
truth."
- From the
American Association
of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgeons |
For
more prevention articles of interest,
check out past LEGACY OF HOPE
Newsletters
|
|
 |
10 Drug and Alcohol Policies That
Will Save Lives |
| PREVENTING
UNDERAGE DRINKING 1.
Increase alcohol prices through
taxes, particularly on beer.
2. Limit
alcohol advertising and promotional
activities that target young
people.
3. Adopt
laws that will prevent alcohol-related
deaths and injuries among young
people.
TREATING
ADDICTION
4. Require
and enforce equal insurance
coverage for drug and alcohol
treatment.
5. Support
the development and use of effective
medications for addiction treatment.
6. Make
Screening for alcohol and drug
problems a routine part of every
primary care and emergency room
visit.
7. Give
higher payments to providers
who get better results.
REDUCING
AND PREVENTING CRIME
8. Require
effective treatment and continuing,
supervised aftercare programs
instead of incarceration for
non-violent drug and alcohol
offenders.
9. Repeal
policies that prevent ex-offenders
from returning to full participation
in society.
10. Support
the work of community coalitions.
-From
JoinTogether.org
For
the Complete guide to "10
Drug and Alcohol Policies That
Will Save Lives," click
here |
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CONTACT SUSIE NOW!!
|
"We
have every reason to look forward
into the future with hope and
excitement. Fear nothing and no
one.
Work honestly. Be good, be happy.
And remember that each of you
is unique, your soul your own,
irreplaceable,
and individual in the miracle
of your mortal frame."
-Pearl S. Buck Wishing
you well,
All of us at LEGACY
Susie Vanderlip - Ken Vanderlip
- Veronica Garcia
800-707-1977 |
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