Pubdate: Tue, 15 Aug 2006
Source: Detroit News (MI)
Copyright: 2006, The Detroit News
Contact:  http://detnews.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/126
Author: Diane Gale Andreassi
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth)

PROGRAM TO TARGET TEEN DRUG ABUSERS

Law Enforcement, Parents And School Officials Will Meet To Discuss Strategies.

HOWELL -- In light of a study that shows drug and  alcohol use in 
Livingston County is higher than the  national averages, parents, 
school officials and law  enforcement agencies are coming together 
this week to  learn more about how to better help young people.

Community Response to Alcohol and Other Drug Use of  Adolescents will 
be presented on Aug. 16-18 by the  Livingston Educational Service 
Agency's Safe and  Drug-Free Schools Consortium at the LESA offices 
in Howell. The drug use statistics come from Western  Michigan 
University surveys conducted in three of the  five Livingston County 
school districts from 2001 to  2005.

The survey shows that, nationally, of the 12th-grade  students taking 
the test, 48 percent consumed alcohol  in the previous month and, 
locally, 54 percent reported  doing so.

The national average of 12th-graders who admitted to  having five 
drinks in a row in the previous two weeks  was 28 percent.

In Livingston County, this measure of binge drinking  was reported in 
35 percent of 12th grade students and  27 percent of 10th-graders.

Kris Nelson, a social worker in Livingston County  schools dealing 
with kids at risk for substance abuse,  believes parents need to pay 
more attention to what  their children are doing. "There is an issue 
with it in  every community," said Nelson, a 44-year-old Brighton 
mother of three teenage boys.

Community Intervention Inc. of Minnesota will outline  intervention 
and prevention ideas. "We'll be learning  the most current 
information about what kinds of  substance abuse kids are doing," 
said Jo DelVero, Hartland Consolidated Schools student 
assistance  program coordinator.

She and Mary Beno, health education and safe and drug  free schools 
consultant for Livingston and Washtenaw  counties, started the program.

"We'll learn new, creative and workable intervention  strategies," 
DelVero said. "And we'll develop policies  and strategies with 
community agencies to work  together."

In 2005, Livingston County emergency medical workers  made 191 runs 
for drug overdose calls. There were eight  reported overdose deaths 
in the county last year.

To sign up for the program, which costs $200 per  entrant, call 
Terese Steinaway at the LESA office (517)  546-5550.
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MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman