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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:

_________________________________________________________

 
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®
 


 

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!

 

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

 
 


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."
.
.
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...

 

 


 
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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