Tuesday, December 2, 2014

Why raise money for an incinerator?

A foundational model that you learn when you begin working in the Prevention field is the Strategic Prevention Framework (SPF). It is simultaneously simple and complicated--PhDs have published explanations, and I have to admit that it took more than one training for me to think "I get it."


In its simplest form, this model translates like this:
  1. Before you decide to go do anything in a community, you first find ways to gauge the needs there. 
  2. After you know the true needs (usually backed up with statistics), you have to build Capacity. Capacity is both who you can get involved in the effort and resources you need to achieve your goals.
  3. Once you have inventoried both people and materials, you can develop specific plans for the action you are going to take.
  4. Implementation is simply applying the plan to real life.
  5. Evaluation includes judging how successful the action was at addressing the community's needs, and improvements.
Spelled out like that, it sort of seems like common sense, doesn't it? You progress through the "Spiff Flower" over and over, never stopping. You are never finished, and always somewhere in the process.

Now that I have learned it and operated from it for nearly a year, I can't unlearn it. Try as I might, I can't get it out of my head. Seriously, it is like something out of Poe.

The first part, Assessment, is the answer to the question in the title of this post. Why raise money for an incinerator? Well, our community needs one. Right here in Tyler, we have a problem with prescription drug abuse, and no one is coming to town to do anything about it. It's up to us. Knowing this is true, based on actual needs in my community, I can't get past how serious a threat unused prescription drugs can be, and I can't walk away and not try to offer a solution.

I want everyone in East Texas to know that prescription drug abuse and misuse is deadly--it is no safer than street drugs. I want every person to know that someone--police or the sheriff's office--will take up turned-in drugs at least a couple of well-publicized times each year and destroy them, free of charge. I want it to be as common and easy to get rid of old drugs as it is, today, to recycle cardboard and plastic.

I don't want to read another story of a person whose life has been shortened because of an accident with leftover pills, or from taking someone else's medications, especially not children. Listen, I have taken someone else's painkillers and been thankful for them, but it can so easily go the other way. I didn't know how commonly it goes bad, or I would have called my own doctor and gone to the trouble of getting my own, correct, prescription.

To my friends who counter that "we" don't have a problem--some "they" does--I say that some of us don't really understand what "WE" means. Also, I hope and pray that someone they love isn't victimized by prescription drug abuse; Be it a child accidentally ingesting pills, an accidental overdose, a pain-killer robbery, or some other drug-related crime, we are susceptible unless we find a way to address the problem.



If you would like to make a tax-deductible contribution to the Tyler Incinerator Project, please follow this link: http://www.gofundme.com/tylerincinerator


December ETSAC Meeting

East Texas Substance Abuse Coalitions' Decembermeeting is set for Tuesday, December 16. We will meet back at the Cotton Patch Cafe (click HERE for map link) from 11:30 until 1:00.

On the agenda for this month:
I want to again update you all about the progress on the Incinerator fundraiser, and collaborate with you on the Implementation Plan that I am developing for this year (this time for real).

Coalition members and guests are welcome to share with the group as well. In fact, if anyone has a need you'd like me to mention, or if you want something added to the agenda, please email me and we will make it happen.

Also, it is Christmastime, so...

See you in two weeks!


Tuesday, November 11, 2014

November meeting set

East Texas Substance Abuse Coalitions' November meeting is set for Tuesday, November 18. We will meet back at the Cotton Patch Cafe (click HERE for map link) from 11:30 until 1:00.

On the agenda for this month:
I want to update you all about the progress on the Incinerator fundraiser, and collaborate with you on the Implementation Plan that I am developing for this year.

Coalition members and guests are welcome to share with the group as well. In fact, if anyone has a need you'd like me to mention, or if you want something added to the agenda, please email me and we will make it happen!

See you next Tuesday!


Friday, November 7, 2014

The Drugs in Our Cabinets


Jacob Hamilton Garrett had been missing for a month when his body was found last March slumped against a tree in a wooded area behind an auto shop, where an employee was installing a fence.

Jacob was 14 years old. A 7th grader at Whitehouse Junior High.

“Jacob was a teenager who was trying to experiment with pills,” said his sister, Robin Hukill Potter, in a Facebook post. “Jacob took a couple meds that you cannot mix. He didn’t know that you couldn’t mix those meds.”

Teenagers are killing themselves with the medicine we leave in our cabinets.

“Deaths from drug overdose have been rising steadily over the past two decades and have become the leading cause of injury death in the United States,” according to the Center for Disease Control website. “Every day in the United States, 114 people die as a result of drug overdose, and another 6,748 are treated in emergency departments for the misuse or abuse of drugs. Nearly 9 out of 10 poisoning deaths are caused by drugs.”

"It's a very serious issue, it is on the rise," said David Davis, Pharmacist, at Good's Medicine Chest in Tyler in a KETK article. "Your teens believe that prescription drug abuse is safer than abusing illegal or street drugs, which is wrong, they're both dangerous drugs … Teens feel like it's not illegal to abuse prescription drugs, when in fact it is illegal to abuse a prescription drug or take a prescription drug that's intended for someone else."

So one of the goals of the East Texas Substance Abuse coalition is to raise money to purchase an incinerator for the Smith County Sheriff's Department, so area residents can safely dispose of their unused prescription drugs (flushing your pills down the toilet contaminates the water supply). Click here to learn more and to donate.

Friday, October 31, 2014

Making an immediate difference in Tyler, TX

tl;dr. Here is the shortest version: I'm asking for tax-deductible donations to buy an incinerator for local law enforcement so we can keep doing prescription-drug-take-back events in Tyler. GoFundMe HERE.


To me, one of the craziest things about ending up working in youth drug prevention is the scope of the work I get to try to do. You have to take a huge, big-picture view of things, or else you will feel discouraged and give up. I mean, the whole "War on Drugs" was declared by President Nixon in 1971, a full year before I was born, and here we are 43 years later still trying to impact things in some meaningful way.

The thing is, if I didn't believe that there are things we can to to make Tyler a better place to live, I would work in some other field. But there are things we can do, right now, that can potentially protect kids and make Tyler safer, drug-wise.

Prescription Drug Abuse is a Growing Problem

The CDC has declared Prescription Drug Abuse an epidemic, especially thanks to increases in prescribing opioidpain relievers – drugs like oxycodone, hydrocodone, methadone and fentanyl – which are driving the dramatic increase in overdose deaths over the last decade.  Opioid pain reliever overdose deaths have quadrupled since 1999. Inadvertent overdose has by surpassed automobile accidents to become the leading cause of injury death in the country. Often, people become hooked on Prescription pain relievers only to move to street Heroin once their prescriptions are finally nixed. This is a real problem, partly caused by the systems we have in place; I have heard of local doctors bypassing new prescription rules, which were put in place to attempt to curb abuse, by prescribing Tylenol with codeine instead of pure opiods. Medical professionals bypassing rules is one reason so many opioids are on the streets in the first place.


Prescription Drugs in the Home

How can having extra Prescription drugs lying about be a problem? Directly, children and thieves have easier access to drugs that are not actively being taken. Poison Control lists 286 calls regarding overdoses of cold medicines, and 464 regarding painkillers between 2009 and 2012, and I personally know of two cases where elderly people's medicine cabinets have been robbed of old painkillers. What's worse, I have known three individuals who have passed away from accidental overdoses of painkillers; these were intelligent, capable people, and in two cases the pills were prescribed to the users, but that's how dangerous opioids can be.

DEA Prescription Drug Take-back Events

Since 2010, the Drug Enforcement Agency has sponsored biannual Prescription Drug Take-back events in communities all over the US. Originally, DEA Agents would be present with local law enforcement in the Spring and Fall and collect voluntary citizen donations. They would then send the drugs to incinerators (Tyler drugs went to Dallas) and dispose of them. This was a costly effort, taking both time and money, but it was thought to have made a difference, and served to educate citizens as well as to remove substances from the streets. After holding events twice each year for four years, the DEA held their final event this past September 27th, citing budgetary reasons. Their hope is, now, that local law enforcement will take over serving communities with events.

I get the need. So, what can I do?

Local law enforcement wants to keep taking in prescription drugs, but this kind of purchase simply isn't in their budgets, and paying for outside incineration is ultimately cost-prohibitive. The East Texas Substance Abuse Coalition  is hoping that the Greater Tyler, Texas community will respond to this need by joining together to purchase a Drug Terminator, a portable, small-batch drug incinerator, for local law enforcement. 

Police incineration is the safest, most effective way for leftover drugs to be disposed of (flushing pills down the toilet further endangers the community by mucking up the water supply). I will launch a GoFundMe campaign and ask that Tylerites join with me in raising money to get this tool for law enforcement--if we can make this purchase happen, we can keep having these events, well into the future. Any tax-deductible gift you can spare will continue to help this community, year after year. If you can help in this effort, visit our GoFundMe Campaign page, and share it, if you will.

And if this fundraising works in Tyler, I will go into Henderson and Jacksonville, Athens, and Canton and see if their law enforcement is as keen to keep things going as Tyler's is, and we will do it all again, there.

Thank you!

Wednesday, October 22, 2014

CVS Offers Drop Boxes to Law Enforcement



CCVS is giving law enforcement Prescription Drug lock-boxes (usually about $900 each) completely free; the application is HERE: http://www.cvs.com/content/safer-communities. They are doing this because the DEA has ceased their involvement in local Prescription Drug Take-Back events—they ran the events for something like 11 years. Now, it is up to local law enforcement (and local citizens) to pick up the slack and set up systems to collect and properly dispose of unused Prescription Drugs.

Proper disposal is NOT flushing them down the toilet! That action will potentially impact our community’s water supply. Instead, the FDA recommends law enforcement incineration as the best option, followed by taking the medicines out of their marked bottles, mixing them with undesirable waste (like used kitty litter), and throwing them in the trash. Both of these methods should help keep dangerous drugs out of the hands of kids and other unintended users.

I certainly plan on doubling-down on law enforcement incineration.

Graphic created by the Seminole Prevention Coalition
Texas has the eighth lowest prescription drug overdose mortality rate in the United States, with 9.6 deaths per 100,000 people, but that rate is up 78% since 1999, when the rate was 5.4 deaths per 100,000. The CDC calls Prescription Drug abuse the “fastest growing drug problem in the United States”—Personally, I know of three elderly people who have had acquaintances (or strangers, in one of the three cases) ask to use their restrooms, and then steal prescription pain killers (and jewelry) during the visit.

Please spread the word to any law enforcement you know so they can take advantage of CVS’ generosity.

Monday, October 20, 2014

Alcohol Compliance Checks

Compliance checks, also known as “stings,” involve an underage operative (a “decoy”), working with either law enforcement officials or agents from the TABC, who enters an alcohol retail establishment and tries to purchase an alcoholic beverage from a server, bartender, or clerk. Typically, the decoy is observed by an undercover enforcement officer. Audio and video recording equipment may also be used or required.
 
If a purchase is made successfully, the establishment and/or the clerk or server may be subject to an administrative or criminal penalty.
 
Why Do Compliance Checks?
 
It may sound mean to trick a merchant and then punish him for his mistake. However, the stakes are high, and delaying youth exposure to/use of alcohol can help young people avoid early exposure to alcohol. There are good reasons why it is illegal for people under age 21 to purchase alcohol. For example, when the drinking age was 18, many more youths were killed and injured in alcohol-related motor vehicle crashes.
 
Too often, early drinking brings with it many problems other than health/brain development issues. Researchers report that when younger people drink they experience:
  • More unplanned teen pregnancies, sexually transmitted diseases, and unplanned sex.
  • More assaults, vandalism, and violence.
  • Increased problems in school and work.
Additionally, there is strong correlation between early exposure to alcohol and developing alcohol dependence later in life (see the graph below).
 
 
Simply upholding existing laws that prohibit retail alcohol sales to minors goes a long way towards keeping East Texas safe for youth despite the recent increase in retail availability.
 
Compliance checks are most effective when they are frequent, well publicized, and well designed, and when they solicit community support and impose penalties on the licensed establishment, rather than just on the server. Frequent Compliance Checks result in an environment where merchants do the right thing, which in turn reduces youth alcohol-related problems within the community.
 
Compliance checks have both educational and behavior-change goals:
  • They change/reinforce social norms that underage drinking is not acceptable by publicizing non-compliant retailers.
  • They educate the community, including parents, educators, and policymakers, about the ready availability of alcohol to youth, which may not be considered a major issue.
  • They help increase alcohol retailers’ perception that violation of sales to minors laws will be detected and punished, creating a deterrent effect.

Wednesday, October 15, 2014

October Coalition Meeting Set

East Texas Substance Abuse Coalitions' October meeting is set for Tuesday, October 21. We will meet at Cotton Patch Cafe (click HERE for map link) from 11:30 until 1:00.

On the agenda for this month:

I will tell you guys about an opportunity for us to impact the community in partnership with local law enforcement. Also, I will share a new presentation I have produced about "newer" drugs.

As always, coalition members may have other good things to share.


See you next Tuesday!



Monday, October 6, 2014

Know Your Drugs: K2, Spice & Cloud 9

The world of Synthetic Cannabinoids is populated by various products that most of us would never have considered smoking. Under various brand names (including Spice and K2 [click here for NIDA Drugfacts on K2]), small packets marked as "Potpourri," "Not for human consumption," Liquid Potpourri," and "Strongest Incense Ever Made" show up at the neighborhood head shop, and even at your neighborhood Exxon station.
 
Some people will smoke ANYTHING!


When you think about it, running across a packet of "potpourri" at a service station should seem pretty unusual, especially if you relate potpourri with your aged Aunt Agnes' perfumed bathroom. Yet there is is, and people of all ages are buying and smoking these "air fresheners" every day, often with terrible consequences.


Spice/K2


What these consumers know that you and I might not is that these products were made for smoking [click link for Longview News Journal article]. They are synthetic cannabinoids, meant to legally offer the same results as marijuana--though not identical to marijuana. Their effects are more volatile and potentially negative. At their worst,  use of these substances may precipitate psychosis—people show up in the ER, after smoking, suffering severe and unpredictable results, including hypertension, tachycardia, myocardial infarction, agitation, vomiting, hallucinations, acute psychoses, seizures, convulsions and panic attacks.


Legally?


Rah-Rho, Raggy...

Well, technically legally. Ordinances and laws have been passed against certain versions, but all the manufacturers have to do is alter the chemical makeup of Scooby Snax Potpourri, for example, and it becomes legal again. A coalition-member friend of mine in law enforcement says that it is very difficult to charge someone with selling K2 because they can defend it as NOT the same substance that is outlawed (even now that there has been a state law outlawing it). The bad guys get up pretty early in the morning, and they are geniuses with chemistry.




"100% Legal!" Methinks they protest too much!

Cloud 9 and E-Cigs







Spice and K2 are small packets of organic matter, like bits of twigs and herbs, all chemically treated with the aforementioned synthetic cannabinoids. Cloud 9, however, is a "liquid Incense" (whatever the heck that is), so it is much more easily vaporized and smoked through the ever-popular E-Cigarette medium. The negative results of Cloud 9 are the same as K2/Spice, since these products are in the same family.

Little bottles of pink chemicals at the gas station! Let's smoke!

Thursday, October 2, 2014

Know Your Drugs: Butane Honey Oil


Preface

"Honey" or "Budder"

First off, let me be clear about something: I am not detailing how BHO is made so that people will try to make it. In fact, were this basic information not readily available online, I would merely write about BHO without the bit of detail here. I include an overview of how it is made only because the process is often dangerous and deadly.

In states where Marijuana is legal to consume, BHO is presently legal, but like many substances we want to delay youth exposure for as long as possible, since early exposure raises the likelihood of negative consequences.

What is BHO?

"Wax"
Butane Honey Oil is a hash oil extraction which uses butane to strip THC from marijuana. Hash oil is not new, but the oil rendered today is more potent (as is today's marijuana), estimated at anywhere from 60% to 99% more potent than traditional marijuana. That is the other large concern I have; we simply do not know the effects of regular, large doses of THC (though one study that focused on youth consumption suggests that young people who smoke regularly--3 times a week--could lose up to 10 IQ points). There just have not been many credible adult studies.

"Shatter"
Anyway, back to BHO. It can render in several different consistencies. "Shatter" is brittle, "Wax" is akin to Play-doh, and "Budder" is more like butter. Each may be dabbed (sampled with a long, needle-like tool) and smoked with no smell in e-cigarettes. BHO is also often used in consumables.
 

These two potentials make it very attractive to students and underage consumers.

Users and Law Enforcement both refer to it as "the Crack of weed," due to its potency.


 

Don't Try This at Home


Marijuana is packed tightly into plastic, metal, PVC, or glass tubes with a hole in one end and a filter on the other.


Butane gas is then attached to the hole, and flushed through the tube. The THC, frozen and stripped from the plant material drips through the filter. The final step requires boiling the oil to release leftover Butane.

The Problem

 

Evidently, BHO is made by Ninjas. Who knew?
Sounds simple, right? The thing is, working with an explosive gas in compressed cylinders can be tricky, and boiling or baking BHO to get rid of the gas is honestly using heat on something flammable. If one is not careful—were one to cook BHO whilst “high,” for instance—the process can prove to be explosive. 

As in the case of methamphetamine labs, most often, law enforcement comes to know of a amateur BHO manufacturer only after tragedy.




The BHO Lab explosion at this apartment complex in Washington State injured several occupants of other apartments and killed one man who was resting in his own apartment. He was the former Mayor.

Friday, September 26, 2014

Final DEA-Sponsored Take-back Event is TOMORROW

Tomorrow is the DEA's ninth (and final) drug-take-back day. Tyler Police will collect your leftover prescriptions at the CVS on Broadway and 5th from 10 am to 2 pm. UT Tyler's Police will also operate a box at the campus police station on Varsity Drive.

Common methods for disposing of unused medicines—flushing them down the toilet or throwing them in the trash—both pose potential safety and health hazards. Prescription drugs should be taken to a local police station or pharmacy to be properly disposed of.

Prescription drugs pose a serious problem; In 2012, 6.8 million American reported abusing prescription drugs (National Survey on Drug Use and Health, 2013), and drug overdoses kill more Americans than firearms or motor vehicle accidents. Prescription drug abuse is the second most prevalent illicit drug problem in the U.S.  The survey also reveals that more than 13 million people, aged 12 or older, are current non-medical users of prescription drugs.

Thursday, September 18, 2014

Cool new feature!

For those of you who showed interest in conducting some of the Alcohol-Retailer Surveys that I mentioned in Tuesday's meeting--they are our way of establishing some baseline data--I have added the forms to the right sidebar of the website.

I have also added both a list of retailers visited and made a really neat interactive map of all TABC-licensed retailers in Smith County. The red pins are the eight stores we have surveyed so far; the blue pins are the 120 left to survey!

I hope to update the map as more surveys are completed. In the future, I plan on using the map to track real, TABC Compliance Checks and separate out the retailers who pass from those which fail.

Thank you to all who came to Tuesday's meeting. Good things are coming!

https://b14a1d9e5021b3ccf3492866cfa9efa203dc35d2.googledrive.com/host/0B82r85hoFz3QRFBXVnRBMXZhYzg/xsMapping.html?f=locationsSurveyedTyler.Data.json
There are plenty of alcohol retailers in Tyler...

Friday, September 12, 2014

ETSAC has a new Facebook Page!

And we need you to come visit it and LIKE it!

https://www.facebook.com/pages/East-Texas-Substance-Abuse-Coalition/686927884726071
Click the photo to go to our page!

Thursday, September 11, 2014

September meeting set for the 16th

East Texas Substance Abuse Coalition's September meeting is set for Tuesday, September 16. We will meet up at Villa Montez (3324 Old Henderson Highway, Tyler, TX 75707) from 11:30 until 1:00.

I will bring with me the updated Logic Model, built with some input from many of you, that I plan to turn in to the state. I will also share some of the exciting things that are going on in various communities and printed materials that our new Media Coordinator, Lauren, has developed.

I have reached out to a few people who I hope will join us and add to the conversation and effort; It should be a good meeting. Feel free to invite anyone who you feel might enjoy it, or who might help.

If it is your first meeting, lunch is on me.

See you all Tuesday!

Click on the photo for Villa Montez's Menu

Wednesday, September 10, 2014

National Suicide Prevention Week

Smith County has a 14.1 per 100,000 suicide rate, which is notably higher than the statewide rate of 10.99  per 100,000. That's not a huge number, but for those of us touched by suicide, there is nothing more tragic.

This week, September 8 through 14, is National Suicide Prevention Week. DSHS has a great presentation that teaches us how to engage the people we meet who may be considering suicide, and I was told they would be happy to come to schools, churches, etc., to train people. If you are interested, contact Dreka Strickland (Dreka DOT Strickland AT dshs DOT state DOT tx DOT us)

Here are some other great resources available for you:



 
 
Photo from Time Magazine--click photo to go to source.