Saturday, June 2, 2012

Get State Certified in Pennsylvania





 REGISTER ONLINE BY CLICKING HERE
        Recovery support is a critical component of the planned healthcare reform initiative and the addiction treatment process. Recovery support services are expected to help prevent relapse and promote long-term recovery, helping to reduce the strain on the overburdened addiction treatment system. The CRS serves as a role model, mentor, advocate and motivator to recovery individuals throughout the state. The CRS credential emphasizes training, specifically in the areas of recovery management, education and advocacy, and ethics and responsibility. The Council of Southeast Pennsylvania's Education Center is launching a new comprehensive program for two weeks beginning on June 25, 2012, for individuals interested in obtaining their CRS credential.
Training Curriculum for the CRS Certification 

        The initial requirement incluldes a high school diploma/GED or college degree. The training is organized into five modules with a total of 54 hours of educational training. The cost of this two-week program is $540.00.

        Recovery Management -- 18 hours
        Education and Advocacy -- 12 hours
        Professional Ethics and Responsibility -- 12 hours
        Confidentiality -- 6 hours
        Additional Addiction Training -- 6 hours

        Following the completion of these five modules, the CRS candidate must pass the written PCB exam for this position as well as submit their apploication, documentation and cettification payment fee. The PCB exam is scheduled for Saturday, July 21, 2012.
Certified Recovery Specialist Curriculum

MODULE 1: RECOVERY MANAGEMENT
This module explains the key concepts of the pathways to recovery including planning, recovery capital, skills and core functions of peer recovery, and the defined support services.
        Course Hours: 18
        Foundations of Recovery, 3
        Many Pathways to Recovery, 3
        Defining Recovery Support Services, 3
        Fundamentals of Recovery Coaching, 3
        Facilitating the Stages of Readiness and Recovery, 3
        Trauma Concerns and the Recovery Process, 3

MODULE 2: EDUCATION AND ADVOCACY
This module defines the concepts of addiction, co-occuring disorders as well as effective communication skills and advocacy strategies.
        Course Hours: 12
        The Science of Addiction, 3
        Co-Occurring Disorders and Related Issues, 3
        Communication Skills for Individuals and Group Facilitation, 3
        Message, Media, and Advocacy Issues, 3
  
MODULE 3: PROFESSIONAL ETHICS AND RESPONSIBILITY
This module focuses on ethical issues relating to addiction counseling.
        Course Hours: 12
        Basic Concepts of Ethics in Peer Culture, 3
        Values, Ethics and Boundaries in Peer Culture, 3
        The Evolving Role of Self Disclosure, 3                        
        An Ethical Responsibility for Self Care, 3

MODULE 4: CONFIDENTIALITY 
This module defines federal and state legislation and professional confidentiallity guidelines for peer recovery services.
        Course Hours: 6
        Confidentiality Principles and Practices, 3
        Implementing Confidentiality Practices, 3

MODULE 5: ADDICTION TOPICS
This module includes relevant topics for recovery planning.
        Course Hours: 6
        Process Addictions, 3
        Family Impact of Addiction, 3

PREPARATION FOR THE CRS EXAM, 3
REGISTER ONLINE BY CLICKING HERE  
The Council of Southeast Pennsylvania, Inc., an affiliate of the National Council on Alcoholism and Drug Dependence (NCADD), is a private nonprofit organization serving Bucks County, Chester County, Delaware County, Montgomery County, and Philadelphia County. The Council provides a wide range of services to families, schools, businesses, individuals and the community at-large regardless of ability to pay, ethnicity, race, gender, age, and/or sexual orientation.

Thursday, May 31, 2012

'Bath salts': Officials say the synthetic drug in disguise was behind recent ‘cannibal’ attack


   

Dangerous drug mimics the effects of cocaine, LSD and methamphetamine

Wednesday, May 30, 2012, 3:12 PMBY MEGHAN NEAL / NEW YORK DAILY NEWS

Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/life-style/health/bath-salts-officials-synthetic-drug-disguise-behind-cannibal-attack-article-1.1086791#ixzz1wRQdJR8u
Containers of ‘bath salts,’ a dangerous synthetic drug sold under names like ‘Ivory Wave’ and ‘Vanilla Sky.’

MIAMI-DADE POLICE DEPT/AP

This combo photo shows Rudy Eugene, 31, left, who police shot and killed as he ate the face of Ronald Poppo, 65, right, during a horrific attack in Miami Saturday.


The “cannibal” attacker who chewed off another man’s face in a gruesome crime in Miami Saturday is suspected to have been under the influence of a dangerous drug sold under the innocuous name “bath salts.”

The victim of the attack, a homeless Miami man, was in critical condition Monday after 75% to 80% of his face was chewed off, CNN reports. Police said the attacker, Rudy Eugene, 31, exhibited “insane” behavior similar to other violent incidences linked to bath salts.

Eugene was shot and killed by police during the attack.

Bath salts, also known by street names like “Ivory Wave,” “Vanilla Sky,” “Bliss,” and “Purple Rain”, made headlines last year after a rush of emergency room visits, thousands of calls to poison centers and several deaths. The man-made, synthetic drug is made from amphetamine-like chemicals and causes a unique combination of effects on the brain.

“If you take the worst attributes of meth, coke, PCP, LSD and Ecstasy and put them together, that’s what we’re seeing sometimes,” Mark Ryan, the director of the Louisiana Poison Center, told the New York Times.

The powdery substance comes in a small packet, and can be inhaled, swallowed or injected, according to a report from the National Institutes of Health.

The drug is manufactured by street chemists and sold in convenience stores or online, often legally. Sellers were able to sell the drug legally since its emergence in 2009 by marketing the substance as either bath salts or “plant food” or “insect repellant,” and stipulating “not for human consumption” on the label.

A 50-milligram packet usually sells for $25 to $50, reports say.

Use skyrocketed throughout last year, mostly by teens and young adults, until in October the DEA banned three chemicals used to make the drug.

Several states have issued a ban on the drug but no federal ban exists.

Users experience a mix of physical and psychological symptoms. The stimulant can cause excited delirium and severe hallucinations. Users can become violent and suicidal. People often experience a super-human strength, and long-lasting euphoria or paranoia, reports say.

The health consequences, like high blood pressure and rapid heart rate, can be fatal.

Because of the nature of the symptoms the drug has been linked to many violent and crazed crimes and deaths like the recent “zombie” attack.

Last year, a man in Indiana climbed a flagpole on the side of a road and jumped into traffic. Another man in Pennsylvania broke into a monastery and stabbed a priest, and a woman in West Virginia scratched herself 'to pieces' because she thought there was something under her skin, the New York Times reported.

Nudity is common because the drug causes body temperature to rise so fast and so high people feel like they're burning up and take off their clothes, reported the Daily Beast.

The powerful stimulant can cause super strength and in many cases hospital officials or police say it takes several people to hold down a user, the Times reported. The person often won’t respond to a stun gun or taser, the paper said.

The U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency has classified bath salts as a Schedule 1 drug, labeling it as highly addictive and illegal. The agency banned mephedrone, MDPV and methoyne, the common ingredients in the drug.

The ban is in place for a year while the DEA studies whether it should be made permanently illegal.

However, banning synthetic drugs if often ineffective, experts say. Bath salts are a designer drug, meaning the chemical concoction can be tweaked slightly and classified as a new drug, making it easy to skirt around the law.

Wednesday, May 30, 2012

Video Game Trains Doctors to Fight Prescription Drug Abuse




By Join Together Staff | May 29, 2012 | Leave a comment | Filed inHealthcare, Prescription Drugs & Prevention

A new video game helps doctors learn how to determine if patients asking for painkillers truly need them. The game is part of an effort at Northwestern University in Chicago to help physicians fight prescription drug abuse.

The game trains doctors to identify deceptive behavior by patients who are likely to abuse prescription painkillers, according to The New York Times. The technology is similar to what the FBI uses to train agents in interrogation tactics, the article notes.

Doctors are taught to look for warning signs of drug abuse, such as a history of family problems. They also learn to observe signs of nervousness, such as fidgeting, finger-tapping and breaking eye contact.

The game is in its final phase of testing. It is designed for primary care and family doctors, who often are not comfortable evaluating patients’ need for painkillers, according to the newspaper.

“This isn’t something medical students have traditionally been trained for,” said Dr. Michael F. Fleming, whose research was used to design the game. “These are hard conversations to have.”

The game will soon be available online to medical schools and health care providers, for a fee. The game includes about 2,000 statements by a patient. Doctors can select from more than a thousand possible responses. The dialogue is based on interviews with more than 1,000 patients who received opioids for pain.

Weather: No Rain!  Outlook: a Fantastic
RIDE for RECOVERY & FAMILY PICNIC
8th annual outdoor event promises good roads for the bikers and lots of fun on campus
Last-minute Registration open til 6PM Saturday
Bike Line-up
Sunday June 3rd
NJ-PA Motorcycle Poker Run
Family Pig Roast Picnic
Live Music, Children's FunReserve Tickets Now
Picnic
Event Registration
Open til Saturday 6PM
Ride / Picnic Registration - $20 *
Second Rider - $10
Picnic Only - $10 *
* Children 12 and under free
  Click on the Event Registration (top right in this email).  
Bike Ride
Win a Harley-Davidson Wide Glide
      (or $7,500 cash option)
Plus $1,000 & $500 prizes
Tickets $10
     at the Store

Rock Band playing at Ride for Recovery
All proceeds from the Ride for Recovery benefit patient programs and charitable care at Livengrin, for people working hard to recover their physical health, emotional strength and ability to make the right choices for their future. 

  Great Ride Shirts and Hoodies Available Now

Tuesday, May 29, 2012

National Inhalant Prevention Coalition: Stop Encouraging Kids to Huff Helium





By Join Together Staff | March 16, 2012 | 1 Comment | Filed in Advocacy,Parenting, Prevention & Youth


Huffing helium is not safe, and adults must stop encouraging children to do it, according to the National Inhalant Prevention Coalition (NIPC), a group that promotes awareness and recognition of inhalant use.

“Unknowing adults demonstrate and often provide helium to kids at parties, or science teachers use it in classes to demonstrate the effects of a gas on vocal cords,” Harvey Weiss, Executive Director of NIPC, said in a news release. “For years I have heard ‘everybody does it,’ and sure enough parents do it as well as Scout leaders, science teachers and even youth pastors. This normalizing of huffing needs to stop and all of us can play a role in that. We must be advocates for children.”

Weiss spoke about the dangers of helium at a press conference in advance of the 20th Annual National Inhalants & Poisons Awareness Week, which runs March 18-24, 2012.

Helium can displace the oxygen in the lungs, leading to oxygen deprivation, according to The Washington Times. This can cause symptoms that range from dizziness to blacking out to cardiac arrest.

Weiss said retailers can reduce helium abuse by placing tanks of the gas higher up on shelves, so they are out of the reach of children. He also called on adults to be more aware of the dangers of huffing helium.

Brian Dyak, President of Entertainment Industries Council Inc., which encourages the media to address social and health issues, called on the entertainment and news industries to educate people about inhalant abuse. The group says inhalant abuse should not be portrayed as glamorous or socially acceptable.

Saturday, May 26, 2012

Driving Loaded? There’s an App for That



Senators were shocked to learn that dozens of applications allow the intoxicated smartphone owner to avoid user-reported speed traps and radar-equipped patrol cars.
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Think what Hunter Thompson could have done with one of these babies. There’s an app for mixing cocktails, and an app for finding bars on the road, so it’s not surprising to discover there’s an app for intoxicated drivers. Four U.S. Senators--Harry Reid (D-NV), Charles Schumer (D-NY),Frank Lautenberg (D-NJ), and Tom Udall [D-NM--have all expressed concern over smartphone applications that allow drivers to avoid DUI checkpoints, and have called for their removal from app stores. The indignant senators sent letters to the head of Apple's iPhone software group, Scott Forstall; Google's CEO Eric Schmidt; and Research in Motion's (RIM) co-CEOs, James Balsillie and Michael Lazaridis, Computerworld reports. The senators identified only one application by name—PhantomALERT--butComputerworld says there are dozens of apps designed to warn drivers of user-reported speed traps, roving radar-equipped patrol cars, and accidents. Many integrate the smartphone's integrated GPS feature to display police and accident locations. "Giving drunk drivers a free tool to evade checkpoints, putting innocent families and children at risk, is a matter of public concern," the senators said in a letter to the executives. "We hope that you will give our request to remove these applications from your store immediate consideration." In 2010 alone, 10,839 people died in alcohol-impaired driving crashes, and over a quarter of a million people are injured in drunk-driving accidents each year.