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News of Hope email. |
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Welcome to April 2010 'News of
Hope'
APRIL is National Alcohol
Awareness Month; and THIS year,
there''s a lot of engaging information
as a result of legislation, research
results, and an increasing awareness
in our society that alcohol abuse and
addiction is a serious disease
impacting individuals, families,
corporations, medical costs, and loss
of life and possibilities.
So, we''re eager to get new info into
your hands -- activating your
thoughts, and encouraging action -
personal and professional!
Since our last newsletter, we also
took the most awesome, incredible
journey of a lifetime! The Ecuadorian
Young Presidents Organization (YPO)
brought us to Quito, Ecuador to work
with youth and families and to join an
international group of YPO families on
the YPO Galapagos Family Experience -
a 5-day cruise of the islands. They
promised it would be the trip of a
lifetime. . . and they MORE than met
their promise! Remarkable (See our
pictures at the link below!).
We were honored to have a chance to
present LEGACY OF HOPE® as a
high school assembly in Quito, Ecuador
for 400 high school students at
Colegio Menor school. An uplifting
experience to find that the teens were
captivated and related to the
characters and message much like
American teenagers do. Clearly, teen
emotions and social pressures are
universal.
We also were pleased to present a DE-STRESS
FOR SUCCESS® workshop for the
local YPO CEO''s and their spouses, so
enjoying their enthusiastic
participation.
The incredible Galapagos cruise was
made complete with a LEGACY OF HOPE®
closing keynote tailored to address
the LIFE BALANCE theme for teens and
parents to rave reviews. We are
GRATEFUL!
Very special thanks to Scott
Greenberg, youth speaker and colleague
who recommended us for the event!
And ultra special thanks to Pedro and
Monica Villamar, our Ecuadorian host
and hostess, for memories we will
cherish for a lifetime!
Pictures Above:
Pic 1 - Assembly day at Colegio Menor
school. Susie presented LEGACY OF
HOPE® for the high school and
Scott Greenberg did an assembly for
middle school, (L to R) - Liliana
Valdez - our YPO Ecuadorian host on
Friday, Andrew Sherman - Director of
Colegio Menor school, Susie and Ken
Vanderlip, and Scott and wife Rachel
Greenberg;
Pic 2 - The Galapagos Explorer II -
our ship for the 5-day cruise,
accommodating 100 passenger max.
Beautiful ship with excellent crew and
care.
Pic 3 - "NOW we''re talkin''!"
says a Golden Dragon Iguana!
Pic 4 - "Easy Does it," the
Galapagos tortoise responds.
ENJOY
photos from our amazing Galapagos
Islands Experience!
Help
Save a Friend's Life...
Hazelden, in Minneapolis, Minnesota,
is one of the United States'' premiere
treatment centers for adolescents and
adults. They also conduct on-going
research via the Hazelden''s Butler
Center for Research and provide
current information on the disease of
alcoholism and drug addiction.
In their April newsletter, they have
provided helpful insights to the
friends and families of problem
drinkers:
If one of your friends needed help
solving a business problem, or was
sick, or needed help watching the
kids, no doubt you''d lend a hand; but
when a friend shows signs of abusing
alcohol or other drugs, sometimes
it''s hard to know what to do or say.
Addiction is more than just a
"problem" it''s a medically
proven disease, just like diabetes,
cancer, and heart disease. And it''s
just as life-threatening if left
untreated.
While the symptoms of these other
diseases are mostly physical, people
with alcoholism and drug problems
experience emotional and social
symptoms as well, often hurting their
friends, families, jeopardizing their
jobs, or harming themselves.
It''s hard to be a friend to someone
abusing alcohol or other drugs, yet
this is the time when your friend
needs you most.
By following the suggestions offered
here, you may be saving your friend''s
life.
Hazelden
continues by making the following
suggestions:
_________________________________________________________ |
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LEGACY
OF HOPE®
Addresses
the Social
Awareness
and
Emotional
Skills
Youth Need
According
to the
April,
2010 Monitor
on
Psychology,
published
by the
American
Psychological
Association,
"The
sad truth
is that
most U.S.
schools
don''t
foster
good
mental
health or
strong
connections
with
friends
and
nurturing
adults"
and yet,
"students
who
participated
in SEL
(social
and
emotional
learning)
programs
gained an
average of
11
percentage
points
more on
achievement
test..."
LEGACY
OF HOPE®
is a
powerful
assembly
program to
incorporate
or even to
initiate
social and
emotional
learning
for teens,
educators
and
parents.
It looks
like
"entertainment"
with a
powerful
emotional
punch. In
reality,
it is SEL
101 -
creating
an
awakening
to the
what we at
LEGACY
refer to
as Emotional
Wisdom.
Evidence
about
concrete
outcomes
from LEGACY
OF HOPE®
programs
at
schools,
community
anti-drug
events and
conferences
are now
available
and
illustrate
how this
internationally-acclaimed
theatrical
program
reaches
youth and
families
about
social
awareness
and
emotional
skills --
leading to
HEALTHY
CHOICES.
Contact us
for
references
and
additional
information
to bring
more
social and
emotional
learning
to your
youth and
families.
Call at
800-707-1977
or email.
For
more about
LEGACY
OF HOPE® |
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Socializing with Heavy
Drinkers Increases Alcohol
Consumption
From Join Together - http://www.jointogether.org/news/research/summaries/2010/socializing-with-heavy.html
April 7, 2010
"The amount of
alcohol you consume seems to be
directly related to the drinking
habits of your social group,
according to a new study.
HealthDay News reported April 5
that researchers focused on data
from 12,000 participants in the
Framingham Heart Study, who were
asked about their drinking and
social networks over the 30-year
span of the study. They found
that those who had friends or
relatives who drank heavily were
50 percent more likely to drink
heavily themselves.
Moreover, even three degrees of
separation -- having friends of
friends who drank heavily --
appeared to influence individual
alcohol consumption.
The opposite also was true --
people who were friends with
abstinent individuals were less
likely to drink themselves. The
results only held true for
family and friends, however, not
coworkers or nearby neighbors.
"We know from alcoholism
treatment that you want to stay
away from people who have
drinking problems if you have a
drinking problem," said
alcohol researcher Marc Galanter
of the New York University
School of Medicine. "AA
[Alcoholics Anonymous] says just
to sever your ties with those
people to be sure that you stay
abstinent."
"In addition to working
with individuals who are
drinking more than is good for
them, we need to come up with
new ways to address this on more
of a public health level,
looking at groups of people and
some of the settings in which
they congregate and reinforce
each other''s drinking
habits," added Ralph
Manchester, director of the
University Health Service at the
University of Rochester in New
York.
The findings were published in
the April 6, 2010 issue of the Annals
of Internal Medicine
LEGACY Comment:
This message has been embedded
in LEGACY OF HOPE
assemblies for the past 15 years
as we share with youth,
"If you hang with people
who drink heavily or use drugs,
it begins to look normal -- even
if it is an unhealthy
normal."
And though the point of this
article may seem obvious to
many, it is NOT to teens. They
have few to no reference
points/life experiences as yet
to see the potential destructive
outcomes of "hanging
with" heavy drinkers and/or
drug users.
Our encouragement to parents,
teachers and adults who care
about teens is to withhold angry
reactions to "crazy teen
comments" about partying.
Instead, continue to share
stories from your life or from
your imagination that illustrate
the negative outcomes of
socializing with heavy
drinkers/drug users.
A teenager does not have a fully
developed cortex - which means
they do not have the capacity to
envision all the consequences or
control all their impulses. Help
them develop the awareness again
and again -- The cortex isn''t
fully grown until close to 27
yrs old!
Let
LEGACY OF HOPE drive the message
home and open up parent-teen
communication!
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New
Research
Finds
Link
Between
Drug
Abuse
and
Obesity
Apr 01,
2010
From
Join
Together:
Some
of the
same
brain
mechanisms
that
fuel
drug
addiction
in
humans
accompany
the
emergence
of
compulsive
eating
behaviors
and the
development
of
obesity
in
animals,
according
to
research
funded
by the
National
Institute
on Drug
Abuse, a
component
of the
National
Institutes
of
Health.
The
study,
conducted
by
researchers
at the
Scripps
Research
Institute,
was
released
today in
the
online
version
of
Nature
Neuroscience
and will
also
appear
in the
journal''s
May 2010
print
issue.
When
investigators
gave
rats
access
to
varying
levels
of
high-fat
foods,
they
found
unrestricted
availability
alone
can
trigger
addiction-like
responses
in the
brain,
leading
to
compulsive
eating
behaviors
and the
onset of
obesity.
"Drug
addiction
and
obesity
are two
of the
most
challenging
health
problems
in the
United
States,"
said Dr.
Nora D.
Volkow,
director
of NIDA.
"This
research
opens
the door
for us
to apply
some of
the
knowledge
we have
gathered
about
drug
addiction
to the
study of
overeating
and
obesity."
Both
obesity
and drug
addiction
have
been
linked
to a
dysfunction
in the
brain’s
reward
system.
In both
cases
over
consumption
can
trigger
a
gradual
increase
in the
reward
threshold
—
requiring
more and
more
palatable
high fat
food or
reinforcing
drug to
satisfy
the
craving
over
time.
Researchers
conducted
this
study in
three
groups
of male
rats
over a
40-day
period.
Each
day, the
three
groups
had
unlimited
access
to
standard
lab
food. In
addition,
two of
the
groups
also had
access
to
high-fat,
cafeteria
style
foods
for
short
(one-hour)
or long
(18-23
hours)
periods.
After 40
days,
all
groups
were
denied
access
to the
high-fat
foods.
Throughout
the
study,
researchers
observed
the
feeding
behaviors
of each
group,
noting
caloric
intake,
weight
gain,
and
brain
response.
The
results
support
the
notion
that
type 2
dopamine
receptors
(D2DR)
—
brain
receptors
that
have
been
shown to
play a
key role
in
addiction
— also
play a
key role
in the
rats''
heightened
response
to food.
In fact,
as the
rats
became
obese,
the
levels
of D2DR
in the
brain''s
reward
circuit
decreased.
This
drop in
D2DR is
similar
to that
previously
seen in
humans
addicted
to drugs
like
cocaine
or
heroin.
"The
results
of this
study
could
provide
insight
into a
mechanism
for
obesity,"
said
Paul J.
Kenny,
one of
the
study''s
co-authors
and an
associate
professor
at the
Scripps
Jupiter,
Fla.,
research
facility.
"It''s
possible
that
drugs
developed
to treat
addiction
may also
benefit
people
who are
habitual
overeaters."
Study
results
also
suggest
that
environmental
factors,
such as
increased
or
unlimited
access
to
high-fat
food
options,
can
contribute
to the
problem
of
obesity.
"Hopefully,
this
study
will
change
the way
people
think
about
eating,"
said
Paul
Johnson,
a
co-author
and
graduate
student
in the
department
of
molecular
therapeutics.
"It
demonstrates
how just
the
availability
of food
can
trigger
over
consumption
and
obesity."
The
study
titled:
"Addiction-like
reward
dysfunction
and
compulsive
eating
in obese
rates:
Role for
dopamine
D2
receptors,"
by Paul
M.
Johnson
and Paul
J. Kenny
can be
found
online
at
Nature
Neuroscience |
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| Healthcare
Reform Law
Gives Big
Boost to
Addiction
Treatment and
Prevention
From
Join Together
- April 9,
2010
News Feature
By Bob Curley
Don''t
count
addiction
recovery
advocates
among those
who see
healthcare
reform as
''Armageddon'':
the bill
signed into
law by
President
Obama on March
23 includes
addiction and
mental health
services in
its basic
benefits
package and is
being broadly
praised by
treatment,
prevention and
recovery
leaders.
According to
an analysis
from the Legal
Action Center
(LAC), the
Patient
Protection and
Affordable
Care Act (HR
3590) requires
a basic
benefit
package for
all health
plans in the
individual
market and
small-group
markets.
"All such
plans will be
required to
cover mental
health and
substance use
disorder
services,"
according to
the LAC, which
said the
measure
represents a
"ground-breaking
expansion of
addiction and
mental health
coverage of
prevention,
treatment and
recovery."
"When the
law is fully
implemented,
32 million
Americans who
are uninsured
today will
have access to
health
insurance
coverage,
including for
addiction,"
according to
Faces and
Voices for
Recovery.
"The new
law builds on
the principle
of equity for
addiction with
other health
conditions in
the Paul
Wellstone and
Pete Domenici
Mental Health
Parity and
Addiction
Equity Act of
2008 and marks
significant
progress in
making it
possible for
many more
Americans to
get the help
they need to
recover from
addiction."
"Including
addiction
treatment in
the basic
benefit for
all medical
insurance is a
major
public-health
achievement,"
added David
Rosenbloom,
Ph.D.,
director of
Join Together.
"Now we
must turn our
attention and
advocacy to
ensure that
the promise is
actually
delivered in
every
community."
.
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Plenty for
Prevention
While much
attention has
focused on the
new law''s
impact on the
treatment and
coordination
with the
general
healthcare
system, the
healthcare-reform
package also
does much to
advance the
cause of
addiction
prevention
because no
child can no
be denied
coverage for
pre-exisiting
conditions,
nor can
insurers drop
coverage of
people with
preexisting
conditions
like addiction
and
mental-health
problems,
according to
Dennis Embry,
Ph.D.,
president and
CEO of the
PAXIS
Institute.
"For the
first time, we
actually have
corporate
incentives for
behavioral
prevention,"
Embry said.
"Previously,
there was no
incentive
except moral,
spiritual, and
ethical --
something that
we''ve been
short in
supply for
some
time."
For
the complete
article...
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| Singin'
and dancin' in the rain! Happy
Spring!
From all of us at LEGACY ...
Susie Vanderlip, CSP, CPAE - Ken Vanderlip,
PhD
800-707-1977
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