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Sunday, May 5, 2013
10 Comic-Book Superheroes With Addictions | The Fix
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Friday, May 3, 2013
Stop Urban Outfitters From Selling Products that Promote Prescription Drug Abuse
By Join Together Staff |
May 1, 2013 |
5 Comments | Filed in
Advocacy, Alcohol, Community Related, Drugs, Marketing And Media, Parenting, Prescription Drugs, Prevention, Young Adults & Youth
Urban Outfitters, the national retail store popular with teens, is currently selling pint glasses, flasks and shot glasses
made to look like prescription pill bottles. These products make light
of prescription drug misuse and abuse, a dangerous behavior that is
responsible for more deaths in the United States each year than heroin
and cocaine combined. Medicine abuse has increased 33 percent over the
past five years with one in four teens having misused or abused a
prescription drug in their lifetime. Combined with alcohol, the misuse
and abuse of prescription medications can be especially dangerous,
making the Urban Outfitter Rx pint and shot glasses and flasks even more
disturbing.
As recent research from The Partnership at Drugfree.org shows, teens
and parents alike do not understand the health risks associated with the
misuse and abuse of prescription drugs.
In fact, more than a quarter of teens mistakenly believe that misusing
and abusing prescription drugs is safer than using street drugs.
Tongue-in-cheek products that normalize and promote prescription drug
abuse only serve to reinforce the misperception about the dangers
associated with abusing medicine and put more teens at risk.
Ask Urban Outfitters to remove these products from their stores and website immediately. Feel free to use the information above to help make your point.
CONTACT INFORMATION FOR Urban Outfitters:
Send an e-mail to:
Richard A. Hayne; CEO & Chairman
richard.hayne@urbanout.com
richard.hayne@urbanout.com
Write a letter:
Urban Outfitters, Inc.
5000 South Broad St
Philadelphia, PA 19112-1495
5000 South Broad St
Philadelphia, PA 19112-1495
Sign this Facebook Causes petition:
When you take action, reply to this e-mail to let us know, share a
comment on the website post – and please forward this message to a
friend or colleague.
Join us and make your voice heard!
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Jon Bon Jovi to appear with Christie today at 'Good Samaritan' drug overdose bill signing
Email the author | Follow on Twitter
on May 02, 2013 at 6:00 AM, updated May 02, 2013 at 10:39 AM
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Jon
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.Getty Images
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.
Thursday, May 2, 2013
Chris Kelly, of rap duo Kris Kross, dies in Ga. - Philadelphia News, Weather and Sports from WTXF FOX 29
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