Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: drug + meth + czar  Related to the article below (Last Update: 12/1/2008)

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Valley anti-drug program honored
Fresno Bee, CA - Nov 28, 2008
Some notable successes helped the Central Valley program garner the awards being presented next week by the White House drug czar's office. ...
Rx meds 'drug of choice' for Iowa youngsters
DesMoinesRegister.com, IA - Nov 14, 2008
The state's drug czar said a statewide database of prescription drugs will help. Gary Kendell, director of the Governor's Office of Drug Control Policy, ...
Source: Google News


 

Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: meth + drug + czar  Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/7/2008)

Greetings from Tijuana
San Diego Reader, CA -
1985 ? Miguel Angel F?lix Gallardo, a former police officer from the Pacific coast state of Sinaloa, is the first Mexican drug czar to link up with ...
Former Staffer Accuses Drug Czar's Office of Faking Statistics
Drug War Chronicle, DC - Jul 15, 2008
There exists a gaping black hole where the Drug Czar's credibility used to be. Even John Carnevale, a former big-shot at the Drug Czar's office is over at ...
The Week Ahead: July 13-19
New York Times, United States - Jul 11, 2008
By THE NEW YORK TIMES Jim De Block in the Royal Ballet of Flanders production of William Forsythe?s ?Impressing the Czar,? part of the Lincoln Center ...
Weekly: This Week in History
Drug War Chronicle, DC - Jul 24, 2008
July 27, 2000: Referring to one of drug czar Barry McCaffrey's tired lines, Salon.com publishes "Fighting 'Cheech and Chong' Medicine," an article showing ...
The Failure of the Office of National Drug Control Policy
Huffington Post, NY - Jul 14, 2008
Eleven of these years were in the Office of National Drug Control Policy where I served four of the nation's so-called drug czars preparing the federal drug ...
Bill Berlow: Hoffman under cover is evidence of a lost war
Tallahassee Democrat, FL - Jul 17, 2008
Marijuana use is down since 2002, and teens' use of methamphetamine, surely among the most harmful drugs on the street, is also down, thankfully. ...
Source: Google News

Methamphetamine use behaviors and gender differences -
ML Brecht, AO'Brien, C von Mayrhauser, MD Anglin - Addictive Behaviors, 2004 - Elsevier
... strategies and points of departure for future research. Author Keywords:
Methamphetamine; Gender differences; Drug use behaviors. ...

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P Jenkins - Just. Q., 1994 - HeinOnline
... symbolized by the appointment of William Bennett as "drug czar." During 1989 ... the
birth of a generation of "crystal meth babies" (US Congress: Drug Crisis 1990 ...

[CITATION] Methamphetamine: Congressional Drug Warriors Keep up Pressure on Drug Czar
DRC Network - Drug War Chronicle, July, 2005

[CITATION] Drug czar says meth law was model for US effort
M McNutt - Oklahoman

Methamphetamine: Putting the Brakes on Speed -
JP Gettig, B PharmD, SE Grady, I Nowosadzka? - The Journal of School Nursing - nasn.allenpress.com
... States Deputy Drug Czar, estimated that there are 1.5 million citizens (about 0.6%
of the American population) engaging in regular use of meth (Jefferson, 2005 ...

[DOC] The return of reefer madness -
M Szalavitz - Salon. com, 2005 - tigger.uic.edu
... is he going to believe me when I tell him that methamphetamine damages the ... The drug
czar's office may soon face a full-blown credibility problem of its own ...

[BOOK] Drugs and Drug Policy: The Control of Consciousness Alteration
CJ Mosher, S Akins - 2007 - Sage Publications

[CITATION] … Abusing Drugs Lifetime use of methamphetamine has dropped by 19% since 2002, federal drug czar
JR BELL - Internal Medicine News, 2006 - Elsevier Inc.

The Meth Crisis New Federal Law Should Help -
US Pharm - US Pharm, 2006 - uspharmacist.com
... Oklahoman. November 19, 2004:13A. 7. McNutt M. Drug czar says meth law was model
for US effort. Oklahoman. March 9, 2006:5A. 8. Food and Drug Administration. ...

[PDF] Mexico, Meth, and Muscatine: Globalization?s Dark Side in Small Town Iowa
JB Fisher - Annual Proceedings from the Transcending Boundaries … - pitt.edu
... doc441ba264d232b612585121. txt. 45 Steve Gravelle,?Geography, Politics Play
Part in Meth Boom, Says Drug Czar,? The Gazette, 12/21/97. 46 ...
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Source: Google Scholar
 
 

Drug czar: Tighten border in meth fight

The next phase in the fight against illicit methamphetamine should emphasize tightening U.S. borders to prevent drug trafficking, expanding voluntary drug testing in schools, and augmenting treatment for addicts, the nation's drug czar said Tuesday.

"Today we have to learn that meth is both a problem on the preventative side and the supply side," John P. Walters, director of the White House drug policy office, said during a news conference in western North Carolina where law officers have raided hundreds of meth labs in recent years.

Restrictions on the sale of cold medicines with ingredients used to make meth have helped several states significantly reduce the number of meth labs in operation, government officials say.

But the gains made by shutting down local meth labs are now threatened by trafficking from super-labs in California and Mexico, officials say.

Meth addiction often leads to psychotic or violent behavior and brain damage. People high on the drug will often stay awake for days.

Walters said the federal government supports expanding random drug testing in schools, an existing program that would remain voluntary. He said research shows that youths who don't use drugs and alcohol are less likely to get hooked after age 20.

"We can change this problem in a durable way for years and years by reducing exposure to young people," Walters said in an interview with The Associated Press.

He also said his office supports boosting federal money for treatment programs.

 

Seniors conflicted over Medicare benefit

August 1, 2006 05:07:25 PM PST

The less medicine they take, the less likely the elderly were to enroll in a new Medicare drug plan, a signal that many senior citizens still don't view the program as insurance in case their health deteriorates.

Researchers say the trend was particularly noticeable among the poor and those without a college education. About 40 percent of these seniors did not have drug coverage — and were not taking medication.

"We speculate that this arises because of constraints or perceptions that make it difficult for people in these groups to account for future benefits," said the authors of an article, published Tuesday in the journal Health Affairs.

The authors concluded that healthy people with low education should be targeted with counseling on the future benefits of coverage, and that waiving a penalty for late enrollment could help bring more into the program.

As incomes rose, the elderly were more likely to have drug insurance, even if they were taking no medications. For those with more than $20,000 in income annually, the percentage without drug coverage dropped to 11.3 percent.

Seniors taking three or more medications were far more likely to have drug coverage, even among the poor. Only 5.2 percent of these people did not have prescription drug coverage, the authors wrote.

The researchers based their conclusions on a survey of 2,137 seniors who were interviewed just before enrollment into the program began and again once enrollment ended.

"The Part D program has performed better than some people feared, but it has also left a significant chunk of people uncovered," said Daniel McFadden, a lead study author and a professor of economics at the University of California, Berkeley. "Many are people that any system would have difficulty reaching and helping make informed choices."

Other authors were Florian Heiss and Joachim Winter of the University of Munich in Germany. The study was funded through the National Institute on Aging and the E. Morris Cox Fund at the University of California at Berkeley.

Seniors seemed conflicted in how they view the program. While 57 percent of respondents described the program as a major benefit, only 30 percent said it was well designed.

"When Medicare was passed in 1965, it was also hotly contested and debated," said Leslie Norwalk, deputy administrator for the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services. "Over time, people have grown to love their Medicare program, and I suspect people will grow to love their drug benefit. It just may take a while for the political waters to calm."

Judith Stein, executive director of the Center for Medicare Advocacy Inc., an advocacy group, said seniors don't like the design of the program because it leads to confusion rather than maximum value.

"Part D should be revisited and redesigned to offer a standardized prescription drug program through the traditional Medicare program," Stein said. "Such a program would be more valuable to more people with Medicare and less expensive for taxpayers."

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