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Call 1.855.378.4373 to schedule a call time with a specialist

The Latest News from Our Field

We curate a digest of the latest news in our field for advocates, policymakers, community coalitions and all who work toward shaping policies and practices to effectively prevent substance use and treat addiction.

The nation's three largest tobacco companies have gone to court with a bid to block New York City from requiring retailers to post graphic images of smoking-related health problems wherever cigarettes are sold.

One more reason to love Philip Morris: A new study finds that U.S. made cigarettes have more toxic chemicals than those made overseas ... Arizona residents will vote in November on whether to make medical marijuana legal ... The Ohio Senate has passed a bill to allow gun-owners to bring their weapons into bars ... Moderate drinking can reduce risk of Type 2 diabetes, Dutch researchers report.

Cigarettes made in the U.S. contain more cancerous tobacco-specific nitrosamines (TSNAs) than those from other countries.
A study of 35,000 20- to 70-year-olds in the Netherlands found that moderate alcohol consumption -- in conjunction with a variety of healthy lifestyle choices -- was associated with a 40-percent reduction in risk of developing Type 2 diabetes.

A new report from the Justice Policy Institute urges states to use "innovative and evidence-based strategies" to safely and cost-effectively reduce their prison populations. JPI "found that increasing opportunities for parole and improving parole release decisions, improving parole supervision and ensuring access to support and treatment services are cost-effective means of cutting extraneous spending while maintaining public safety."

The report is For Immediate Release: How to Safely Reduce Prison Populations and Support People Returning to Their Communities.

A new "day in the life" report from SAMHSA says that every day 508,000 adolescents aged 12-17 in the United States drink alcohol; 641,000 use illicit drugs; and more than 1 million smoke cigarettes.

Also, 563,000 adolescents used marijuana, nearly 37,000 used inhalants, 24,000 used hallucinogens, 16,000 used cocaine and 2,800 used heroin, according to A Day in the Life of American Adolescents: Substance Use Facts Update, which is based on 2008 data.

SAMHSA administrator Pamela S. Hyde, J.D. calls the findings "a wake up call about the extent to which our nation’s youth engage in risky behavior by using illegal and potentially dangerous substances everyday."

I don’t know about that...

Former President George W. Bush writes in his forthcoming book that his decision to quit drinking alcohol at age 40 turned his life around and set him on a course that would ultimately lead to the Presidency.
A federal jury in Bridgeport, Conn., awarded $8 million to a smoker and larynx-cancer patient in a case against R.J. Reynolds.

What say you, Amethyst Initiative? College students drink and drive more after they reach legal drinking age, a new study finds ... Former President George W. Bush says his journey from ne’er do well to the White House started with his decision to stop drinking ... Even notoriously frugal New Englanders are starting to hit the tobacco industry with large penalties in sick-smoker cases ... And it’s little wonder smokers get sick: a new study finds that smoking caused literally tens of thousands of genetic mutations in tissue taken from a middle-aged smoker.

Eric Morris’s always-entertaining Freakonomics blog at the New York Times this week asks what works in getting people to drink less alcohol. As usual, the economist references an impressive array of research as he weighs in on the various interventions available.

Morris’ conclusion: screening and brief intervention has the most promise, and while restrictions on alcohol advertising seems to work, it’s doubtful that serious curbs will ever be enacted.

As we report in the news today, the parent company of retailer TJ Maxx acted swiftly to remove a series of drinking games from stores shelves after a Boston Globe reporter spotted the games and contacted the company asking why games titled "Drink Like a Fish" and "Drink Til You Drop" were on display next to graduation gifts.

Anheuser-Busch and a local beer wholesaler are seeking a deal to name a new performing-arts center in Raleigh, N.C., the Bud Light Amphitheater. City officials said the $300,000 in annual fees for the naming rights would cover most of the facility’s operating expenses, but the city’s Substance Abuse Advisory Commission says the deal would send the wrong message to kids.

Are you concerned about alcohol and other drug use in Massachusetts? If so, there are several opportunities for you to learn and lead this month. Check out the free one-day advocacy and leadership trainings co-sponsored by the Association for Behavioral Healthcare (ABH) and Massachusetts Organization for Addiction Recovery (MOAR). (The Allston training is sold out, but seats for the Pittsfield and Peabody trainings are still available.)

Here’s a retailer that doesn’t discount public opinion: the owner of TJ Maxx pulled drinking games from store shelves after an inquiry from a Boston reporter ... a Saudi treatment program is looking to the U.S. for a model for improving services in a country where Islam prohibits any use of alcohol or other drugs ... Pink cigarettes, anyone? Tobacco companies are ramping up marketing to women in poor countries as smoking among men declines ... No spitting, smoking or swearing: An upstate New York college is using positive peer pressure to fight bad behaviors.

Students at Onondaga Community College in Syracuse, N.Y., will launch a comprehensive 'good behavior' campaign in the fall to discourage smoking in prohibited areas, littering, and other bad habits on campus.
A new energy drink called 'Four Loko' has a 12-percent alcohol content and is loaded with caffeine and sugar.