Substance Use Prevention Coalition Plans
Prevention and Harm Reduction Strategies
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[March 17, 2024]
The
Substance Use Prevention Coalition (SUPC) met for its monthly planning
and updates meeting at Lincoln Memorial Hospital (LMH) on Thursday,
March 14.
Representatives from a number of area organizations met both in person
and online to discuss best practices and upcoming events to support
prevention and harm reduction of substance use.
Prevention Updates
Initiatives in youth prevention education continue. Last fall Illini
Central and New Holland-Middletown schools participated in the
prevention curriculum, and currently it is being offered at Lincoln
Junior High School. A direct mailer is being sent to high school
students as part of the anti-vaping campaign. Lunch tables will be set
up at high schools with surveys, information cards, and swag.
The Illinois Youth survey is ongoing and designed for feedback about
youth substance use and bullying. It started in January and goes until
the end of year. The goal of the youth survey is to help with future
youth services. A question arose about starting an anti- vaping campaign
for junior high age, as well. Right now data is observational and
anecdotal, but it is projected that the data indicating the need will be
available in the future.
There is a new QR code for the Logan County online resource directory
guide with resources that are continually updated
www.logancountyresources.org.
Harm Reduction Updates
A new naloxone (Narcan) vending machine has been reported in another
county. Free naloxone is also available at the Logan County Courthouse,
the Logan County Health Department, and Family Custom Cleaners Sharps
disposal boxes are now available for free at the Logan County Health
Department.
Jeanette Davis of Recovery Oriented Systems of Care (ROSC) has plans to
begin community conversations about harm reduction to address the belief
that harm reduction is not needed. ROSC is looking into trainings for
starting and hosting discussions about the need for harm reduction. A
survey is available about the need for a better meeting time for the
monthly ROSC meeting. Saturday, March 16 at 2 p.m. was a free screening
of “Generation Found” at Lincoln Grand theater with resource tables
available and a panel question and answer session. The movie is also
available on Amazon Prime. There will be a repeat screening at the Arlee
Theater in Mason City on March 23 at 1 p.m. ROSC is discussing creating
a QR code with a pre and post survey for the round table discussion.
Molly McCain, Community Health Needs Assessment Coordinator for LMH,
reported that substance use, youth mental health, and obesity are the
top three concerns to come out of the 2024 Community Health Needs
Assessment, which are the same top three from the assessment three years
ago. McCain conducted a focus group at Oxford House and has met with
about seven other groups in the community so far. April 22 is the date
scheduled for the advisory board meeting to narrow down the top three
priorities. After additional meetings, the results will be posted online
by October 1. After the results are compiled and posted, implementation
will begin.
SUPC is planning the data collection phase of the
environmental scan. A resource package is forthcoming. The 70+ alcohol
licensed outlets in Logan County will fall under data collecting, not
punitive measures. The data collection will involve working through a
checklist including questions such as is the alcohol next to snacks or
close to the door or are there special sales and deals and what kind of
advertising is appealing to youth in the community? Data collection will
be observational only, and most businesses are following the law.
Businesses currently identified for data collection are a randomized
selection with the goal of adding another 20 or so businesses.
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Hope on Fifth is still under development. There is
discussion about offering a room to Safe Passages while clients are
in process. Organizers are also looking at providing a Veteran’s
only support group at Hope on Fifth. Hope on Fifth also has a new
Facebook page. The board continues to meet so that they can get
things up and running. They know they will need help and donations,
so they are getting the messaging together.
The process for getting Medical
Assisted Recovery at the jail is ongoing. There are also self-help
meetings starting at the county jail. Medical Assisted Recovery is
administered through SIU. The extended shot is now available as an
option.
Gateway Foundation in Bloomington had the grand opening for the new
facility in Bloomington on Thursday, March 14.
Nadia Klekamp of Chestnut Health Systems spoke about The Center for
Community Engagement at Chestnut Health Systems (www.coalitionsupport.org),
which is a resource and is information heavy with toolkits for
stigma reduction, transportation, and generally information that is
pulled together. The organization helps build capacity to address
problems. Trainings with CEUs are pending. Many trainings are
archived and available. They are open to feedback.
McCain will be scheduling focus groups with
highschoolers to talk about the kind of messaging they would prefer
to receive from a text campaign about mental health and substance
use to launch with freshmen at LCHS in the fall. This initiative is
grant funded.
The Regional Substance Use Prevention Integration Center in
mid-Illinois is an organization that works with any youth
organizations or services to integrate substance use prevention into
their programming or that would like to expand their integration or
does not do substance use prevention yet.
Discussion arose about additional prevention ideas such as sharing
stories from drug court with youth or schools and to reestablish Big
Brother/Big Sister programs. There is a need to pour into youth,
particularly with low self-esteem. There is always room for
expansion.
Klekamp observed in the context of youth education that things seem
to change more quickly now. The current youth prevention program is
“Too Good for Drugs," which is a school program that is
evidence-based curriculum. A facilitator works through scenarios and
talks about a specific subject each session over a 10 or 11 week
time span with goal setting, decision making, coping with emotions,
and other topics.
In prevention strategies the question is always how can we increase
protective factors, reduce risk factors, and increase communication
of parents with students. Are students being monitored
appropriately? How can community support increase? Prevention is a
continuum, i.e. working with students who are in use versus those
who have never used. Brain research indicates that 25 years old is
the age of completed brain development, so scare tactic strategies
are not effective for adolescents like they would be in adults.
Youth prevention is more challenging because we do not see results
right away. Equipping parents to talk with their kids is an
important strategy. A seed may develop, but it might not happen
right away. The D.A.R.E. program, which has been in existence for
many years, creates the opportunity to build a relationship with law
enforcement outside of a punitive situation. It is a program that is
developed and adapted.
The next ROSC meeting is March 21. The next SUPC meeting is April
11. The Community Health Collaborative next meets at the Logan
County Health Department on June 6.
[Stephanie Hall] |