Pubdate: Thu, 19 Nov 2009 Source: Ithacan, The (NY Edu) Copyright: 2009 Ithaca College. Contact: http://theithacan.org/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1759 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?225 (Students - United States) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?219 (Students for Sensible Drug Policy) A SENSIBLE DECISION Ithaca College Administration Is Urged to Adopt a Good Samaritan Policy That Doesn't Leave Room for Abuse Ithaca College's Students for a Sensible Drug Policy chapter is taking steps to pass a Good Samaritan policy at the college - a measure that could protect lives and encourage students to speak up in potentially life-threatening situations. This would allow intoxicated students who need medical attention to get help without facing judicial repercussions. It would also grant amnesty to anyone else involved in the situation, such as the person who made the emergency call. Right now students may be discouraged from calling for medical help when it is necessary because they are afraid of getting in trouble, losing scholarships or being judicially referred. Not only does that put lives in danger, but it reinforces bad habits when students are confronted with difficult decisions. Despite good intentions, though, the policy could potentially allow students to abuse it. Repeat offenders could make frequent calls for medical attention without facing the legal consequences of repeated intoxication or underage drinking. Further, the policy does not promote the college's efforts to discourage binge drinking among students. Be it through documenting repeat alcohol abusers or mandating that those students learn about the consequences of binge drinking, the college and the policy should aim to limit abuse of amnesty. SSDP is urged to reach out to students across campus and solicit their opinions to draft a policy that truly reflects the college culture and student demands. The college should also focus on providing more alcohol education, through mandatory floor meetings for example, about binge drinking and the signs someone needs medical attention. The college should go beyond the online alcohol awareness program required for incoming students. Before the college adopts the Good Samaritan policy, it should review its merits and review other colleges' policies. It should aim to increase calls for medical assistance, because students' health and well-being is most important. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake