Fighting Substance Abuse--Prevention Panel WorksOn An Action Plan
Fighting Substance Abuseââ
Prevention Panel Works
On An Action Plan
By Larissa Lytwyn
In response to recent drug-related arrests, Newtown Prevention Council is creating an âaction planâ to merge community efforts into a coordinated network of preventative and treatment information.
The plan, added to the agenda just a few days before the councilâs monthly meeting November 20, attracted nearly two dozen residents.
Newtown Public Schoolsâ Health Coordinator Judy Blanchard discussed the need to integrate the districtâs 2002 substance abuse survey, grades 7 through 12, part of the Governorâs Prevention Initiative, into a similarly-designed antisubstance abuse action plan.
The action plan involves identifying both âriskâ and âprotectiveâ factors among peers, as well as in communities, schools, and families.
The survey revealed that while relatively low substance abuse levels exist in grades 7 to 9, the numbers rise significantly among older students. Recent underage drinking reported by Newtownâs tenth and twelfth graders, for example, was âat or above the national average,â stated the survey summary.
While, nationally, 48.6 percent of seniors reported drinking in the past month, 68.6 percent of Newtown seniors said they were recent drinkers.
The survey also revealed major discrepancies between younger and older students in their attitude toward substance abuse.
While 15.7 percent of seventh and eighth graders felt it was âwrongâ for someone their age to drink alcoholic beverages, 57.8 percent of ninth and tenth graders said it ânot at allâ wrong or âa little bit wrong.â Further, 32.6 percent of eleventh and twelfth graders saw little or no harm in getting drunk occasionally, the survey found.
Newtown Middle School health teacher Gail Seymour said that societal factors often give students âmixed messagesâ about substance abuse. âStudents have asked me why marijuana isnât legalized because of its medicinal purposes,â she said. âStudents also are told that if they drink, they shouldnât drive â which still doesnât address the issue of underage drinking!â
Like elsewhere in Connecticut, marijuana is the most commonly used illicit drug among adolescents in Newtown; 38.7 percent of eleventh and twelfth graders, according to the survey, admitted to using marijuana in the previous month.
Frequent marijuana usage is linked to increased substance dependence, accidental injury, emergency room admissions, poor school performance, legal problems, and increased school dropout rates, the survey reported.
Newtown High School Principal Bill Manfredonia said there is a âzero toleranceâ policy at the school. Students identified as under the influence of an illegal substance are automatically arrested, he said. âWe donât like to see the [police] reports in the paper,â he said, âbut itâs important that this is addressed.â
First-time offenders are suspended for three to five days, prohibited from participating in extracurricular activities for 21 days, and mandated to undergo at least three sessions with a school guidance counselor. Third-time offenders face at least one-year expulsion, Mr. Manfredonia said.
Obstacles To Treatment
âThere are often a lot of barriers to adequate substance abuse treatment,â said Pam Crowcroft, a substance abuse counselor for Newtown Public Schools. âOver the past few years there has been a decline in adolescent treatment.â
Substance abuse treatment involves both medical and mental services, explained Ms Crowcroft. âInsurance companies may cover a few days of detox, but after that itâs difficult to afford ongoing treatment,â she said. Additional insurer concerns, she continued, include a high adolescent recidivism rate, which is also high among adults.
Academic punishment, such as suspension, said Ms Crowcroft, can facilitate usersâ destructive behavior. âStudents are often unsupervised during the day, particularly with single- or two-parent working families,â Ms Crowcroft said.
Another major impediment to effective treatment, she continued, is strong denial among teens and often their families. âThis denial factor can be compounded with other familial issues, such as unhappy marriages or adult substance abuse,â said Ms Crowcroft.
Studies have long confirmed that substance abuse often has genetic patterns.
âThere is an issue of what came first, the emotional issue or the substance abuse,â said Ms. Crowcroft.
Greg Jones, clinical program manager for Danbury Hospitalâs Center for Child and Adolescent Treatment Services (CCATS), said that there are often case histories of teens recalling depression, anxiety, and other problems in their middle school and even elementary school years.
â[Substance abuse] can be a response to these other problems, if these other problems are left untreated,â said Mr. Jones.
CCATS provides extensive outpatient adolescent treatment programs to area families. âWe often refer patients seeking inpatient care to Four Winds Hospital in Katonah, New York, or Silver Hill Hospital in New Canaan, among others.
âWe accept most major insurers, and we have a special financial counselor that works with uninsured families,â said Mr Jones. He added, âWe do not turn anyone away.â
Resources
Center for Child and Adolescent Treatment Services, Danbury, 830-6082.
Newtown Youth Services, 270-4335.
Newtown Counseling Center, 426-8103.
Parent Connection, 426-9280 or 426-6424.
On The Web
Connecticut Clearinghouse â Offers links to a variety of mental health services, www.ctclearinghouse.org.
Liberation, Meridian & Guenster â Comprehensive substance abuse resource, www.lmgprograms.org.