Friday, May 3, 2013

NAADAC Institute Education Update


Don't miss these great opportunities to earn CEs, advance your professional life and enhance your practice through live seminars, independent study or online!
Exploring Techniques to Support Long-Term Addiction Recovery for Clients & Families

Thursday, May 23, 2013
12pm - 2pm EST (11 C/10 M/9 P)
Techniques employed during treatment and early stages of recovery are different than those used to support long-term recovery.  This webinar outlines the differences between professionally directed, long-term treatment planning and patient-directed long-term recovery planning and the role of addiction professionals in long-term recovery of their clients and families.  The presenters will also explore recovery-focused reconstruction of identity, character, relationships, and resiliency marked by spiritual self-transcendence, mutual dependence, humility, tolerance, respect and service to others (“recovery as a process of getting out of oneself”) in comparison to techniques of individual, group, and family recovery that focus on enhancing self-knowledge, self-development, self-assertion, self-control, self-confidence, and self-esteem (“treatment as a process of getting into oneself”).

Become a member of NAADAC to earn free CE credit for all NAADAC webinars & online courses (over 75 CEs): www.naadac.org/join
Upcoming Recovery-Oriented Webinars:

Collaborating with Other Professions, Professionals & Communities
Tuesday, June 4, 2013
3pm - 4pm EST (2 C/1 M/12 P)

Including Family & Community in the Recovery Process
Wednesday, June 19, 2013
3pm - 5pm EST (2 C/1 M/12 P)

Full List of NAADAC Webinars:
www.naadac.org/education/webinars
You Can Make a Difference: Join a NAADAC Committee

Would you like to play a major role in finding solutions to the many challenges facing addiction professionals? Ready to bring your knowledge and expertise to the table?

Join a NAADAC committee and help address healthcare reform, parity, licensure and funding for the profession. We do this by strengthening and elevating our professional status, providing training and advocacy, providing up-to-date information to our members and working collaboratively with other stakeholders.
More Information
Reason #16 I Love My NAADAC Membership:

NAADAC members receive reduced rates for malpractice and liability insurance for individuals and agencies.
Medical and dental insurance is also available.  NAADAC members also enjoy special discount rates on comprehensive professional liability insurance with no deductible and access to a legal hotline that is exclusive to NAADAC members and provides two hours of free legal assistance to prevent claims against you.  Call 800.735.1588 or e-mail insurance@vanwagnergroup.com for full details.
Events From Our Partners
National Council of Asian Pacific Americans Policy Summit 

May 9, 2013 from 6:30 PM - 8:30 PM in Washington, DC
NAPAFASA, in partnership with the American Psychological Association's Office of Ethnic Minority Affairs through its Ethnicity and Health in America Series, is raising awareness concerning the chronic condition of stress among America's Asian and Asian American communities.

The forum, which is hosted in partnership with the DC Mayor's Office on Asian and Pacific Islander Affairs, the Montgomery County Asian American Health Initiative, and AARP, will focus on family expectations and demands as it relates to stress.  It will begin with a film screening of CAN: What does it take to heal from mental illness, a documentary film by Pearl J. Parks. After the film screening the panelists will guide the open discussion on sources of stress, cultural/racial factors associated with those stressors as it impacts Asian American, Native Hawaiian, and Pacific Islander families, and how to access resources to cope with the burden of stress.  Panelists include Charissa Cheah, PhD, Derek Iwamoto, PhD, Matthew Miller, PhD, and Myron Dean Quon, Esq.  RSVP by May 7, 2013 by clicking here.

Mind-Body-Spirit Workshop

Fully Alive: Exploring the Mind-Body-Spirit Connection to Health and Healing 
May 18, 2013
Dynamic 8-contact hour workshop in Sedona, AZ at Best Western Arroyo Roble Hotel designed for personal and professional development. Optional 20 contact hour session available for health care professionals.  Learn about thriving in stressful times, spiritual nutrition, meditation, humor, happiness and health, healing environments, and art therapy. To register, go to www.allegralearning.com or call 760-231-9678.

Jon Bon Jovi to appear with Christie today at 'Good Samaritan' drug overdose bill signing

Susan K. Livio/The Star-Ledger By Susan K. Livio/The Star-Ledger
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on May 02, 2013 at 6:00 AM, updated May 02, 2013 at 10:39 AM





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JonBonJovi.JPGJon Bon Jovi, who appears in this photo with his wife Dorothea Hurley at the White House Correspondents' Association after-party Sunday, will accompany Gov. Chris Christie today when he signs a bill shielding from prosecution people who report a drug overdose. 
PATERSON — When Gov. Chris Christie signs the Good Samaritan Overdose Prevention Act at a drug treatment facility in Paterson today, Jersey rocker Jon Bon Jovi will be at his side.
Bon Jovi has lived through the trauma of a child suffering a drug overdose. Six months ago, authorities found 19-year-old Stephanie Bongiovi unresponsive following a heroin overdose in her Hamilton College dormitory in upstate New York. Police later arrested her on drug possession charges.
The Sayreville-raised musician and philanthropist has spoken publicly about the experience, telling Katie Couric on her talk show in March he had no idea his daughter had a drug problem. "The problem is much more prevalent than I know. I cannot get over how many people I've met that said 'my son' or 'my daughter' … There is a lot of pressure on kids these days," Bon Jovi said, according to published accounts of the interview.
"She's doing great and I appreciate everyone's thoughts and prayers. I'm just blessed she's healthy and whole, and we'll get through it," he added.
Christie is signing a bill that allows people to call 911 to report someone has overdosed on drugs, without the fear of getting themselves arrested for drug possession.
Only six months ago he had vetoed the bill, saying it didn't focus enough on prevention and deterrence. But a group of families whose loved ones had died from drug overdoses pleaded with the governor and the legislature to find a compromise. They had testified at committee hearings that overdoses often occur in the presence of other drug users, but medical assistance is summoned only half the time because bystanders fear arrest.
On Monday, Christie and the legislature approved a new bill that provides immunity to 911 callers under most circumstances. But they combined it with another measure that makes naloxone, an FDA-approved remedy for drug overdoses, available to spouses, parents or guardians who could be taught to administer the drug in an emergency.
Christie and Bon Jovi are first expected to tour Turning Point’s facility at the Barnert Medical Arts Complex this afternoon before the bill signing, according to the governor's office.