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         Drug Programs & Projects:     more books (48)
  1. New Jersey alcohol and drug abuse program for the deaf, hard of hearing and disabled : from advocacy to access by Nancy Ferreyra, 2002
  2. The effect of a drug education program upon student drug knowledge, drug usage, and psychological states by Gloria A Grizzle, 1974
  3. Program evaluation report, 1992-1994 for educational support services personnel drug prevention training project in the public school systems in Los Angeles County California (SuDoc ED 1.310/2:374390) by Donald L. Kester, 1994
  4. Evaluation of Project Rehab: 61st District Court Diversionary Program 1974 by Rodney J Mulder, 1974
  5. Project North Star: Drug interdiction at the United States-Canada border (USAWC Military Studies Program paper) by Thom E Tuckey, 1992
  6. NIJ evaluates drug control projects (SuDoc J 28.24:Ev 1) by U.S. Dept of Justice, 1992
  7. Safe spaces drug and alcohol prevention education for special needs and drug exposed K-2 children : a program (SuDoc ED 1.310/2:405653) by Eileen Wasow, 1992
  8. The Medi-Cal therapeutic drug utilization review project by Evelyn Deborah Jay, 1991
  9. The Adolescent Drug and Alcohol Intervention and Referral (ADAIR) program: Process evaluation report by David Paul Moberg, 1982
  10. The impact of the National Guard counterdrug program in America: Where do we go from here? (USAWC strategy research project) by Reginald B Geary, 2000
  11. Evaluation information for the Sullivan County (NH) Superior Court Alternative Sentencing Program: Report prepared under "Implementing State Strategies ... the Courts : a Technical Assistance Project by David C Steelman, 1995
  12. Models of case management for pregnant and parenting addicted women and their families: A report of the case management models project by Marty Jessup, 1994
  13. An evaluation of Project Opportunity: A primary prevention program for women in major life transition by Christine Bitonti, 1989
  14. Prevention Center Papers, program report by S. Kay Rockwell, 1981

41. Hobart And William Smith Colleges :: Campus Resources: Alcohol And Other Drugs
Alcohol Other drug programs, Alcohol Education Project, Alumni Alumnae The mission of the Office of Alcohol and Other drug programs is to take a
http://www.hws.edu/studentlife/resources/alcohol/index.asp
Members of the Colleges Chorale performed on a concert tour to Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania and Finland.
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QuickLinks Phone/Email Search Sitemap A-Z Webmail Hurricane Katrina About HWS Academic Calendar Academic Programs Academic Support Administration Admissions Advising Alcohol Education Project alumNET Applying Athletics-Hobart Athletics-William Smith AV Media Services Blackboard Blackwell, Elizabeth Business Office Calendar of Events Capital Projects Career Center Campus Life Campus Safety Center for Global Education Clubs and Organizations College Store Commencement Counseling Center Daily Update Deans Dining Services Diversity E-mail/Phone Search Employment ePostcards Experts Facilities Faculty Faculty Listing Faculty Web Services FAQS Financial Aid-Prospectives Financial Aid-Current Students Finger Lakes Institute Fisher Center Giving to HWS Graduation Grants Guide (The) Health Professions History of the Colleges Home Pages Hubbs Health Center Human Resources HWS 2005 HWS Writes Information Technology Intercultural Affairs Internships Intramurals Lecture Series Library Library Catalog Majors and Minors Map (Campus) News and Events News Clips News Releases News Releases - Sports Online Forms Orientation Parents Pay Student Bill Phone/E-mail Search President's Page Provost Publicity Public Service Registrar Religious Life Res Ed Reunion Salisbury Center Scholarships Shuttle Schedule Student Life Student Life and Leadership Student Web Services Study Abroad Summer Programs Trustees Visiting Admissions Visiting Campus Volunteers Webmail WEOS Radio var dropdownsLoaded=false

42. Hobart And William Smith Colleges :: Academic Community: Alcohol
Alcohol Other drug programs, Alcohol Education Project, Alumni Alumnae Alcohol and Other drug Education Project. The Social Norms Theory
http://www.hws.edu/academics/community/alcoholeducation.asp
There are 28 Fulbright Scholars among current HWS faculty members. Site Map A-Z
Help FAQs

QuickLinks Phone/Email Search Sitemap A-Z Webmail Hurricane Katrina About HWS Academic Calendar Academic Programs Academic Support Administration Admissions Advising Alcohol Education Project alumNET Applying Athletics-Hobart Athletics-William Smith AV Media Services Blackboard Blackwell, Elizabeth Business Office Calendar of Events Capital Projects Career Center Campus Life Campus Safety Center for Global Education Clubs and Organizations College Store Commencement Counseling Center Daily Update Deans Dining Services Diversity E-mail/Phone Search Employment ePostcards Experts Facilities Faculty Faculty Listing Faculty Web Services FAQS Financial Aid-Prospectives Financial Aid-Current Students Finger Lakes Institute Fisher Center Giving to HWS Graduation Grants Guide (The) Health Professions History of the Colleges Home Pages Hubbs Health Center Human Resources HWS 2005 HWS Writes Information Technology Intercultural Affairs Internships Intramurals Lecture Series Library Library Catalog Majors and Minors Map (Campus) News and Events News Clips News Releases News Releases - Sports Online Forms Orientation Parents Pay Student Bill Phone/E-mail Search President's Page Provost Publicity Public Service Registrar Religious Life Res Ed Reunion Salisbury Center Scholarships Shuttle Schedule Student Life Student Life and Leadership Student Web Services Study Abroad Summer Programs Trustees Visiting Admissions Visiting Campus Volunteers Webmail WEOS Radio var dropdownsLoaded=false Academic Programs Majors/Minors Academic Enrichment Academic Community ... Registrar
Alcohol and Other Drug Education Project:

43. Anti-drug Program Rewards Youths With Activities
Antidrug program rewards youths with activities. Jul. 23, 2005 1200 AM We did a lot of projects like building robots and rockets, he said.
http://www.azcentral.com/community/westvalley/articles/0723wvangela0723Z1.html
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Anti-drug program rewards youths with activities Jul. 23, 2005 12:00 AM Summer vacation often means sleeping late, playing video games, and taking a break from school's hectic schedule.
But more and more students are using the summer break to take extra classes, do volunteer work or attend camps to get a boost in sports, academics or hobbies.
At Landmark Middle School in Glendale, about 120 students spent two weeks at the Glendale Police Department's DARE/GREAT summer program. advertisement OAS_AD('BoxAd')
Officer Mark Mabee , who has run the program since 1999, said the goal of the program isn't to drill students on the anti-drug, anti-gang message of the regular school year programs, but to reward good students with two weeks of activities.
The kids attended presentations on a variety of subjects, such as desert animals and stargazing. They also did crafts and went on field trips. Mabee probably knows better than anyone that when kids are bored, "that's when kids start to get into trouble."
A group of 41 high-school students never had a chance to be bored during Tech Camp, a one-week immersion in technological careers at Glendale Community College.

44. Drug Policy Project
KCBA drug Policy Project increases in the scope and effectiveness of drugaddiction treatment programs, including expanded access to treatment,
http://www.kcba.org/druglaw/
King County Bar Association
1200 Fifth Avenue Suite 600
Seattle, WA 98101
Phone: (206) 267-7100
Fax: (206) 267-7099
Top of Page
KCBA Drug Policy Project
    The King County Bar Association is leading a high-level partnership of lawyers, doctors, pharmacists and other professionals in Washington to find more effective ways to reduce the harm and costs of drug abuse, and of the “War on Drugs” itself. What began over four years ago as a transitory study of current drug laws has evolved into a comprehensive, long-term effort to bring about meaningful reform of drug policy on many levels. The principal objectives of this effort are: reductions in crime and public disorder improvement of the public health better protection of children ; and wiser use of scarce public resources Through its Drug Policy Project, the King County Bar Association has been examining a public health approach to drug abuse, promoting:
    • increases in the scope and effectiveness of drug addiction treatment programs, including expanded access to treatment, improved case management systems and the broadening of treatment opportunities to include mental health care, work-readiness and vocational training, literacy training, housing and the fostering of peer and family supports;
    • reforms and improvements to drug abuse prevention and drug education programs that ensure the implementation of evidence-based methods, stressing youth development in general and the maintenance of healthy behaviors and healthy relationships rather than a fear-based approach to drug use that too often relies on misinformation or partial information;

45. California Courts: Programs: Collaborative Justice: Drug Courts
The California Department of Alcohol and drug programs and the California JudicialCouncil OJP drug Court Clearinghouse and Technical Assistance Project
http://www.courtinfo.ca.gov/programs/collab/drug.htm
Drug Courts
"If you don't like paying for jails, if you don't like a waste of tax dollars, then you'll like the concept of drug courts. This is an initiative that's been working." - General Berry McCaffrey, former Director of the Office of U.S. National Drug Control Policy - What Is a Drug Court?
Program Benefits

California Drug Court Standards

Funding for Drug Courts
...
Resources
Of Current Interest California Association of Drug Court Professionals (CADCP) Announces 2005 Conference (PDF, 289 KB)
Drug Court professionals from across the state will meet at the 2nd Annual CADCP Conference to discuss current trends, pending budget requests, involvement with Prop. 63, drug court best practices, and much more. This year's theme is "Planning for the Future - Expanding the Drug Court Model." Register today! Download Registration Form (PDF, 130 KB) Download CADCP Membership Form (PDF, 134 KB) Bureau of Justice Assistance (BJA) Releases 2005 Drug Court Grant Program (2/2005) Janet Reno Visits Local Drug Court (12/2004)
Former U.S. Attorney General Janet Reno (right) chats with Superior Court of Marin County Presiding Judge Terrence R. Boren and Administrative Office of the Courts Collaborative Court Program Manager Nancy Taylor during a December 2 visit to the Marin County court. Reno praised Superior Court of Marin County judges, commissioners and drug court professionals for their good work on drug courts. A long-time advocate of collaborative justice programs, Reno helped create the first drug court in the nation after she was elected the first woman district attorney of Dade County, Florida. (Photo: Janice Hughes)

46. California Courts: Programs: Drug Courts
Opinions Forms Rules Courts You are currently in the programs section Careers drug Court. Last modified Monday, 03Jan-2005 073716 PST
http://www.courtinfo.ca.gov/programs/drugcourts/
Last modified: Monday, 03-Jan-2005 07:37:16 PST About Us Accessibility Web Site Feedback

47. Roche Pharmaceuticals: Careers: Drug Information Residency Program: Residency Pr
projects associated with the drug Information Residency Program. A residencyproject will focus on the pharmaceutical industry and it is to be completed
http://www.rocheusa.com/ppi/residency/projects.asp
Drug Information Residency Program Residency Projects The resident participates in a variety of experiences during the one-year program. Some of them include, but are not limited to: What does it entail?
A residency project will focus on the pharmaceutical industry and it is to be completed during the course of one’s residency training. The completed residency project will be presented at two professional meetings: Drug Information Association meeting and the Eastern States Conference. Past Projects
  • Fax Back: A Survey of Best Practices Among Industry-Based Drug Information Departments
  • Verbal Only Responses: A Benchmarking Survey of Pharmaceutical Companies

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48. AARS Programs - Asian Drug And Alcohol Prevention And Treatment (Project ADAPT)
Asian drug and Alcohol Prevention and Treatment (Project ADAPT) At ProjectAdapt, clients are offered a therapeutic program of structured activities
http://www.aars-inc.org/programs/adapt.html
Asian Drug and Alcohol Prevention and Treatment
(Project ADAPT)
2020 Hayes Street
San Francisco, CA 94117
Program Manager: Lien Cao Project ADAPT is a comprehensive multi-cultural and multi-lingual adult outpatient program that integrates intensive substance abuse treatment, vocational training and continuing care into an innovative culturally competent treatment model to reduce substance abuse among Asian monolingual immigrant and non-immigrant populations. At Project Adapt, clients are offered a therapeutic program of structured activities which enable them not only to live efficiently, but also to build strength, confidence, and pride within family and community.
Project ADAPT was founded in 1993 because of the increasing problem of substance use and abuse in the Asian immigrant community. No one was providing drug treatment services to the monolingual immigrant, and if one was not bilingual, one was out of luck. Project ADAPT took on this challenge by offering substance abuse services in Cantonese, Tagalog and Vietnamese. Along with the counseling services, Project ADAPT offers English as a Second Language (ESL) and computer classes. This unique combination of services allows an individual to work toward recovery, independence and self-sufficiency.
This program is funded by Community Substance Abuse Services of the San Francisco Department of Public Health.

49. Project Towards No Drug Abuse (TND)
Project TND is a drug abuse prevention program with a focus on high school youth,ages 14 to 19. It has been tested at traditional and alternative* high
http://www.colorado.edu/cspv/blueprints/model/programs/TND.html
Home I Contact I Site Map
Blueprints Model Programs
Project Towards No Drug Abuse (Project TND) Program Summary Program Background Contact Project TND Program Summary Project Towards No Drug Abuse (Project TND) is an effective drug abuse prevention program that targets heterogeneous samples of high school-age youth. Reductions in cigarette smoking, alcohol use, marijuana use, hard drug use, and victimization have been revealed at one- and two-year follow-up periods. Program Targets:
Project TND is a drug abuse prevention program with a focus on high school youth, ages 14 to 19. It has been tested at traditional and alternative* high schools using true experimental designs. Program Content:
A set of 12 in-class interactive sessions that provide motivation-skills-decision-making material targeting the use of cigarettes, alcohol, marijuana, hard drug use, and violence related behavior. The topics are:

50. LawHelp Legal Information Search Results For Health Law
Prescription drugs and Other Assistance programs Screening Tool (Separate By Pennsylvania Health Law Project. Getting Prescription drug Services
http://www.palawhelp.org/PA/StateChannelResults.cfm/County/ /City/ /demoMode/= 1

51. The Johns Hopkins Gazette October 28, 2002
Championing the Value of drug Treatment programs. Project Lift, a United Wayinitiative, In general, taxpayers don t want to support drug treatment.
http://www.jhu.edu/~gazette/2002/28oct02/28champ.html
October 28, 2002
VOL. 32, NO. 9
Championing the Value of Drug Treatment Programs
Project Lift, a United Way initiative, seeks to raise community awareness By Greg Rienzi
The Gazette

One day about four years ago, Steffanie Strathdee sat in her Vancouver, Canada, home reading The Corner, a book that chronicles a year on the corner of Fayette and Monroe streets, one of Baltimore's most notorious open-air drug markets. Strathdee, who was then a faculty member at the University of British Columbia, says that more than just a good read, The Corner became her main motivation for wanting to relocate to Charm City and work at Johns Hopkins. "Even before I put [the book] down, I said to myself, This city needs help," says Strathdee, now an associate professor in epidemiology at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health , whose research on drug users dates back to 1988. ALIVE, a study of the risk factors and natural history of HIV and hepatitis C among injection drug users in Baltimore, is one of Steffanie Strathdee's research projects at Hopkins. Strathdee, shown above seated next to principal investigator David Vlahov, is the medical spokesperson for Project Lift, a United Way initiative that educates the public about the value of drug treatment. Strathdee says she was particularly inspired by the story of Fran Boyd, a main character in

52. 1996-1997 ANNUAL REPORT
In 1982, the TR4 Animal drug Program was established as part of the overall IR-4program. ACTIVE projects. NRSP-7 MINOR USE ANIMAL drug PROGRAM
http://www.nrsp7.org/Reports/AnnualReport_96-97.htm
1996-1997 ANNUAL REPORT
MINOR USE ANIMAL DRUG PROGRAM (NRSP-7)
Background
In 1976, the Food and Drug Administration/Center for Veterinary Medicine (FDA/CVM) established a committee of animal producer groups, pharmaceutical industry personnel, U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) and FDA representatives to study the need for minor use animal drugs. This committee identified the scope of the problem, the major diseases in minor species and the principal minor diseases in the major species. In 1982, the TR-4 Animal Drug Program was established as part of the overall IR-4 program. Since that start, the animal portion has developed into a means of securing approved drugs and a conduit between the animal industries and the FDA/CVM. In 1990, the USDA requested a peer review of the overall IR-4 program and recommended a reorganization of the animal section. This change was carried out with the development of a separate Technical Committee that reported to the IR-4 Administrative Advisors. In 1992, the IR-4 Administrative Advisors recommended that with the pending change from Interregional Projects to National Research Support Projects (NRSP) that the two programs (pesticide and animal) be separated into two distinct projects. In 1993, the Minor Use Animal Program (NRSP-7) was created.

53. NCPDP
National Council for Prescription drug programs, Inc. (NCPDP) Future ProjectDevelopment of an Implementation Guide for Pharmacy using the X12 835
http://www.va.gov/publ/standard/health/9706/NCPDP.htm
National Council for Prescription Drug Programs, Inc. (NCPDP) Contact Lee Ann C. Stember, President National Council for Prescription Drug Programs, Inc. 4201 North 24th Street, Suite 365 Phoeniz, AZ 85016-6268 Phone: (602) 957-9105 Fax: (602) 955-0749 E-Mail: lstemb@ncpdp.org Recently Published Standards
  • -Standard Billing Unit Format - Version 1 Release 2 -Compound Transaction Implementation Guide -Batch Standard -n Version 1 Release -Prior Authorization Standard - Version 1 Release
Recently Sponsored or Co-Sponsored Meetings
  • 1997 Annual Membership Conference Annual four day meeting of approximately 700 members held February 16-19, 1997 in Scottsdale, AZ. Joint Quarterly Work Group Meetings
      Quarterly, three day meetings of NCPDP work groups and maintenance and control groups. Held each quarter, the most recent, full three-day meeting took place May 7-9, 1997 in Dallas, TX. The next full three-day meeting will occur August 18-20, 1997 in San Francisco, CA.
    Board of Trustees Meetings
      Three two-day meetings annually of NCPDP Board of Trustees. The most recent meeting took place on June 9-10, 1997 in San Antonio, TX.

54. Rural Community Health Clerkship Community Project Database - Oregon AHEC - Oreg
This project proposes one such program, the creation of an organized Only 50%of patient were knowledgeable about reduce cost drug programs.
http://www.ohsu.edu/ahec/clerkship/listsomeabstracts.cfm?fk_mesh=60

55. RAND Helping Adolescents Resist Drugs
To be successful, drug use prevention programs like Project ALERT and ALERT Plusneed not turn every drugusing youth into a lifetime abstainer.
http://www.rand.org/publications/RB/RB4518.1/

56. RAND | RAND Drug Policy Research Center | Publications | 2004 Newsletter
Project ALERT Evaluation Confirms Value of Classroom drug Prevention Started early enough in schools, drug prevention programs can buy time,
http://www.rand.org/multi/dprc/pubs/2004_newsletter/project_alert.html
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2004 Newsletter
Contents
2004 Newsletter
Project ALERT Evaluation Confirms Value of Classroom Drug Prevention
Although drug use among middle school students appears to have leveled off during the late 1990s, U.S. adolescents continue to use alcohol, tobacco, and marijuana at unacceptably high rates. The good news is that a large-scale evaluation of Project ALERT, the widely used middle school drug prevention program developed by a team led by DPRC researcher Phyllis Ellickson, shows that the program successfully alters the course of substance use for many youth. The program even helps high-risk youth, whom many have claimed are beyond reach. Project ALERT is a two-year classroom curriculum that seeks to motivate students against using drugs and to give them the skills needed to translate that motivation into effective resistance behavior. Initially field-tested in the 1980s, the current Project ALERT curriculum was released to schools in 1995 and is now used in all 50 states. In 2001, the U.S. Department of Education named Project ALERT an Exemplary Model Program.

57. FHI - IMPACT Project
IMPACT manages HIV/AIDS programs and projects in more than 70 countries.The project also guides regional programs in the Baltics, Asia, the Caribbean,
http://www.fhi.org/en/HIVAIDS/Projects/IMPACT main page.htm
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    IMPACT Project
    ... IMPACT Project HIV/AIDS
    IMPACT Project
    The IMPACT (Implementing AIDS Prevention and Care) Project is the U.S. Agency for International Development's flagship effort for addressing the global HIV/AIDS pandemic. Managed by FHI, the project is designed specifically to help USAID missions and bureaus support HIV/AIDS programs by increasing the capacity of local organizations—public and private (including community- and faith-based organizations)—to implement effective HIV/AIDS strategies. As the IMPACT Project closes, read final reports from each IMPACT country below. Read this page in:
    What's New on fhi.org
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    Learn more...
    Also:
    View our HIV/AIDS country programs.
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    FHI offers a range of technical services, including clinical and other research, in HIV/AIDS, sexually transmitted infections and other infectious diseases, contraceptive technology, and women’s health.

58. Science + Literacy Drug Education Partnership--Project & Materials
ABOUT SCIENCE + LITERACY FOR HEALTH drug EDUCATION PROJECT Both books havebeen popular in adult literacy programs, in drug rehabilitation programs,
http://ehrweb.aaas.org/scilit/500.htm
Learn about the partnership , the many valuable materials it has generated, and other online resources available from AAAS. ABOUT SCIENCE + LITERACY FOR HEALTH DRUG EDUCATION PROJECT Why Science + Literacy for Health? The Project's Goal Early Initiatives
Human Genome Project
... Project Materials Why Science + Literacy for Health? Forty-four percent of American adults function at the two lowest literacy levels (of five identified), according to The U.S. Department of Education's 1992 literacy study . Other studies estimate that 27 million Americans are functionally illiterate. Along with joblessness, poverty, and other ills, adults with poor literacy skills suffer from lack of information about a vital area of their lives: health care. The Science + Literacy for Health project attempts to address that needto improve access to health and science information for all people. The Project's Goal The American Association for the Advancement of Science launched Science + Literacy for Health in 1992, in conjunction with and with funding from the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) The project's goal is to improve the scientific literacy of all adults by identifying and creating culturally sensitive materials for use in literacy programs and community-based adult substance abuse and mental health education programs.

59. Vera Institute Of Justice | Projects | Diverting Drug Abusers From Prison
State Sentencing and Corrections Program project archive New York State sExtended Willard drug Treatment Program seeks to reduce the use of prison
http://www.vera.org/project/project1_1.asp?section_id=3&project_id=10

60. HARP Home Page
Health Administration Responsibility Project Medicare Maximum drug Prices;Free drug programs for low income patients
http://www.harp.org/
Health Administration Responsibility Project
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About this site
HARP is a resource for patients, doctors, and attorneys seeking to establish the liability of HMOs, Managed Health Care Organizations, and Nursing Facilities for the consequences of their decisions. We are concerned that in the headlong rush to "Efficient" Medical care, the organizations involved are losing sight of the "Quality" of the care they provide. As more and more "Incentives" to cut back on medical care are put in place by the new class of medical entrepreneurs, the patient often suffers. We feel that Counter-incentives must be applied, and they must be financial. The only such Counter-incentives available under our system are lawsuits for damages caused by excessive cost-cutting measures. However, many obstacles protect corporate providers from being held responsible for their acts. ERISA drastically limits the remedies available to injured workers, as well as preempting State regulations designed to control the more egregious problems. Rigged Mandatory Arbitration gives injured patients the illusion of justice. Strict application of state

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