North Country Health Consortium
North Country Prevention Newsletter
"Working together to create healthier communities for
our children and families."  
                                      
October 2012
Greetings!

Welcome to another edition of the North Country Prevention Newsletter. This is a monthly electronic communication to and for the North Country Prevention Coalitions including the Colebrook Area Community Action Team, Berlin Area Community Action Team, the Lancaster Area Community Action Team, the Littleton Alcohol, Tobacco and Other Drugs (ATOD) Task Force, the North Country Prevention Network, community partners, program participants and interested stakeholders. This newsletter is a project of North Country Health Consortium.

 

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Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention (OJJDP) September 2012 Juvenile Justice Bulletin Speaks to the Effects and Consequences of Underage Drinking
U.S. Department of Justice-Office of Justice Programs-Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention Bulletin-September 2012

The recent literature review conducted by the Office of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention (OJJDP) highlights the effects and consequences of underage drinking. The authors of the review highlight the following:
  • The human brain continues to develop until a person is around age 25. Underage drinking may impair the neurological development causing youth to make irresponsible decisions, encounter memory lapses, or process and send neural impulses more slowly.  
  • Underage Drinking cost society $68 billion in 2007, or $1 for every drink consumed. This includes medical bills, income loss, and costs from pain and suffering.  
  • In 2009, 19 percent of drivers age 16-20 who were involved in fatal crashes had a blood alcohol concentration over the adult legal limit (0.08).
  • Alcohol use encourages risky sexual behavior. Youth who drink may be more likely to have sex, become pregnant, or contract sexually transmitted diseases.

To view the OJJDP Bulletin, please visit:


To find out how the problem of underage drinking affects New Hampshire, check out the New Futures document, titled "The Scope of the Problem in New Hampshire":  

http://www.new-futures.org/sites/default/files/uploads/resources/UAPScope.pdf 

 

Are you wondering how many North Country High School Students use alcohol? Check out the North Country Community Report Card:

http://www.nchcnh.org/images/NCHCuplds/files/Final%20Report%20Card%202011.pdf   

 

Red Ribbon Week is Right Around the Corner:
October 22-28!




The Profile School's Friends of Rachel (FOR) Club planting their tulip bulbs during Red Ribbon Week as part of the "Plant the Promise" Campaign.
  Are you prepared for Red Ribbon Week? Are you in need of project ideas? The Partnership for a Drug-Free New Hampshire has prepared a toolkit to provide some activity ideas for your school and community youth groups:
http://www.drugfreebunnynh.org/DFNH/2012-RRW-Toolkit.pdf

To view the other resources available, please visit:

Join the "Plant the Promise Campaign" by planting tulip bulbs in your community! Red tulip bulbs are planted during Red Ribbon Week and bloom during the month of April, National Alcohol Awareness Month, to remind individuals that prevention is a year-round, ongoing endeavor. All youth groups are invited to join the campaign. The NH National Guard donates approximately 1,000 tulip bulbs to the North Country annually during Red Ribbon Week to allow youth groups to partake in the nation-wide effort.
Stratford Tulips
Stratford School's tulips bloomed during National Alcohol Awareness Month.


Please contact Diana Gibbs at dgibbs@nchcnh.org or call 259-3700 ext. 222 to obtain tulip bulbs for your campaign. Please note, quantities are limited, so order yours today!

Would you like to connect with others on a national scale? Check out the official Red Ribbon Campaign Facebook page:
Tax Hikes Caused 3 million Fewer People to Smoke than in 2009
Adopted from USA TODAY, September 13th, 2012-By Dennis Cauchon

Save the Date! 37th Great American Smokeout, November 15, 2012. "Make a plan and quit."

A giant federal tobacco tax hike has spurred a historic drop in smoking, especially among teens, poor people and those dependent on government health insurance, a USA TODAY analysis finds.

 

President Obama signed the tax hike - the biggest to take effect in his first term - on his 16th day in office, reversing two vetoes by President Bush. The federal cigarette tax jumped from 39 cents to $1.01 per pack on April 1, 2009, to finance expanded health care for children. Since then, the change has brought in more than $30 billion in new revenue, tax records show.

 

Yet the tax hike and its repercussions remain mostly unknown to the non-smoking public. The tax increase's size and national reach lifted prices 22% overnight, more than all state and local tax hikes combined over the past decade when adjusted for inflation.

 

Result: The tax hike has helped restart a long-term decline in smoking that had stalled in recent years. About 3 million fewer people smoked last year than in 2009, despite a larger population, according to surveys by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

 

The tax hits hardest on families who make less than $50,000 a year and account for two-thirds of smokers.

 

"The federal tax increase was the win-win that we thought it would be and the evidence shows that," says Danny McGoldrick, research vice president at the Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids.

 

Teen smoking immediately fell 10% to 13% when the tax hike took effect, says researcher Jidong Huang of the University of Illinois at Chicago. "High prices deter kids from picking up cigarettes," he says.

 

Higher taxes aren't the only reason smoking has fallen dramatically among adults since the early 1980s and among teens since the mid-1990s.

Health concerns, smoke-free buildings and marketing restrictions have played a role. Tobacco companies have raised their prices, too, making money off fewer customers.

 

"It's difficult to be specific about what influences individual adult consumer behavior, but taxes are one thing in the mix," says David Sutton, spokesman for Altria Group, maker of Marlboro cigarettes. He says taxes and fees are so high - 55% of Marlboro's retail price - that they unfairly burden adults who choose to smoke.

 

Taxes are the sledge hammer of anti-smoking efforts. The federal tax hike helped push tobacco use down to 18.9% in 2011, the lowest level on record, according to the CDC surveys. Even smokers who don't quit light up less. In the 1990s, one of every 20 high school students smoked 10 or more cigarettes a day. Today, one out of 71 students smoke that much.

 

Other findings:

 

*Who quit: The elderly and Hispanics slashed smoking most dramatically, each down more than 15% from 2008 to 2011, according to the CDC's National Health Interview Survey. Women quit more than men. Least moved: middle-age men, down just 1.2%.

 

*Health care for poor: About 1 million adults on Medicaid quit smoking, which could reduce future health costs.  

 

*Tobacco industry: Consumer spending on tobacco rose from $80 billion in 2008 to $98 billion in 2011 in inflation-adjusted dollars - even though the amount of tobacco purchased fell 11%, Bureau of Economic Analysis data show. Higher taxes accounted for about half that spending increase. The rest went to tobacco companies and retailers.

 

To view the USA TODAY article, please visit:

http://www.usatoday.com/news/nation/story/2012-09-10/cigarette-tax-smoking/57737774/1  

Join our efforts:
Become a member of the Coalition!
2012 Meetings:

Coos County Coalition:
The Coos County Coalition is comprised of three Community Action Teams from the Colebrook Area, Lancaster Area, and the Berlin Area. All interested parties are welcome to attend. The 2012 meeting schedule for the Community Action Teams will be (*please note that meeting locations will be announced once confirmed*): 

  • Colebrook Area Community Action Team Meetings will be held on Mondays from 12-1:30pm:
    • October 22nd, 2012: 12-1:30pm at Upper Connecticut Valley Hospital, Colebrook, NH    

  • Lancaster Area Community Action Team Meetings will be held on Fridays from 8:30-10:00am:
    • October 12th, 2012: 8:30-10am at the White Mountains Regional High School     

  • Berlin Area Community Action Team Meetings will be held on Wednesdays from 12-1:30pm: 
    • October 17th, 2012: 12-1:30pm at Androscoggin Valley Hospital, Berlin, NH 

Littleton ATOD Task Force:
The Littleton ATOD Task Force meets at the North Country Health Consortium located at 262 Cottage Street, Suite 230. All interested parties are welcome to attend. The 2012 meetings will be held on Wednesdays from 9-10:30am. The meeting schedule will be:

  • October 11th, 2012: 9-10:30am  
  • December 13th, 2012: 9-10:30am  

All are welcome to attend! For more information regarding the Coos County Coalition or the Littleton ATOD Task Force, please contact Diana Gibbs at 259-3700 or at dgibbs@nchcnh.org.

Create a SafeHome for your Family!

Sign the SafeHomes Pledge today!
The Project Monitor SafeHomes pledge is a voluntary pledge program that encourages parents and guardians of youth to join together with other parents in providing a safe home environment for their teens to socialize. The Pledge asks parents to educate their youth on the dangers of drug and alcohol use, providing a clear message that youth shall not use alcohol, tobacco or other drugs in their community. What is Safe Homes? The Safe Homes Pledge is a non-legally binding pledge publicly stating that there will be no underage use of alcohol, tobacco or drugs in your home or on your property. Sponsored by the North Country Community Substance Abuse Prevention Program.

To sign the pledge or to encourage other parents to sign the pledge, visit and/or share the following link:
We invite items for the newsletter from our readers that relate to prevention, youth and parent programs, new developments, training and opportunities. The deadline for submissions to this monthly newsletter is the 26th of each month. Send items to dgibbs@nchcnh.org.
This newsletter is a project of the North Country Health Consortium, a rural health network improving the health of North Country residents through innovative collaboration. Working together with businesses and other community organizations, the health and human service provider members of the Consortium are building a regional health care system to address the needs of Northern New Hampshire.    
"North Country Health Consortium leads innovative
collaboration to improve the health status of the region." 
 
This newsletter is supported by funds from
SAMHSA's Center for Substance Abuse Prevention and
 New Hampshire's Bureau of Drug and Alcohol Services.

North Country Health Consortium

Substance Abuse Prevention Program

262 Cottage Street, Suite 230

PO Box 348

Littleton, NH 03561

Phone: (603) 259-3700

Fax: (603) 444-0945 
www.nchcnh.org


View past editions of the North Country Prevention Newsletter and other North Country Health Consortium Newsletters by visiting:

http://archive.constantcontact.com/fs056/1103416365553/archive/1105769579473.html

 


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