Title: Developing Effective Methamphetamine Prevention Programs
1- Developing Effective Methamphetamine Prevention
Programs
2Kansas
- 105 counties
- 2,723,507 residents
- 91 rural
- Ranked 13th in the country in reported lab
seizures with 168 in 2006 - 1,997 Kansans entered state-funded treatment for
methamphetamine in FY2006 - 5.3 of Kansas high school seniors report using
meth at least once in their lifetime
3Kansas Methamphetamine Prevention Project
- Provides
- Training (including training-of-trainers for
implementation of community meth prevention
initiatives and Drug Endangered Children
programs) - Technical assistance to communities throughout
Kansas and the United States - Public awareness through presentations,
materials, and websites - Coordination of agencies
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5What Was Done Initially in Kansas
- Conducted four statewide trainings of trainers
- Provided small mini-grants to communities for
start-up funding - Provided meth prevention resources to communities
- Provided on-going training and technical
assistance to communities - As a result, 43 counties implemented meth
prevention efforts.
6Outcomes in Kansas Communities
- Decrease in theft of precursors (including
anhydrous ammonia) - Reduced usage by youth
- Increased arrests
- Increased safety
- Improved collaboration
- Increase in public awareness
- Increased media coverage
7Assess the Meth Problem at the Community Level
- Lab seizures
- Trafficking seizures
- Treatment data
- Student survey statistics
- Arrest data
- Media accounts
- Information from retail stores including visual
surveys of meth manufacturing ingredients and
paraphernalia - Interviews with treatment providers, law
enforcement, inmates, and recovering meth addicts
8Considerations for Implementing Meth Prevention
Initiatives
- Start with a community assessment and use data to
demonstrate need - Determine availability of resources
- Utilize existing resources
- Develop partnerships
- Hold regular meetings
- Create a plan with a timeframe
9Strategies for Addressing Methamphetamine at the
Community Level
10Community-Level Efforts Implemented to Address
Meth Problem
- Public awareness (town hall meetings, educational
materials) - Meth Watch
- Drug Endangered Children programs
- Strategies targeting retailers, agriculture, home
visitor occupations, schools/youth - Efforts to address drug paraphernalia
- Media campaigns
- Legislative advocacy
- Policy changes (e.g. ordinances targeting
property owners, paraphernalia, etc.) - Implementing effective treatment programs
11Public Awareness
- Distribute educational materials
- Create visual aids (mock meth lab, seizure map)
- Town Hall meetings
- Training-of-Trainers
- Presentations tailored to specific audiences
- Audiences to target
- Neighborhoods
- Retailers
- Chance encounter occupations
- Lawmakers
- Hotel/motel employees
- Child protective service workers
- Landlords
12Home Visitor Safety Awareness
- Presentation
- Clothing Personal Items
- Preparation, Parking Pre-surveillance
- Developing relationships w/law enforcement
- Meth Lab Indicators
- Dealing with meth-using individuals
- Excuses to Leave
- Follow-up
- Laminated Tips for Home Visitors card
13Meth Watchwww.kansasmethwatch.com
- Key Components
- Place precursor products in consistently staffed
areas - Limit packages on the shelf and packages per
purchase - Report suspicious transactions to law enforcement
- Educate customers by providing Meth Watch
information
- Key Benefits
- Safer stores
- Better customer relations
- Reduced store losses due to theft
- Increased employee awareness
- Better relations with law enforcement
14Rural Strategies for Meth Prevention
- Tank locks
- Tamper tags
- Tank signs
- Surveillance cameras
- Additives
- Education of farmers/ranchers
15Addressing Access to Drug Paraphernalia
- Gather city/county specific data
- Research successful strategies from other states
- Public awareness including educational flyers and
cards for customers to provide to businesses - Warning letters delivered to store managers
and/or owners by law enforcement with a 7 day
follow-up to seize items - Propose changes to existing statute
Glass pipe and blunt wrap purchased near a high
school by a 14-year-old
16School/Youth Strategies
- Research-based prevention programs
- Available curricula
- www.lifeormeth.org
- Presentations for students, teachers counselors
- Videos Life or Meth Whats the Cost? and
Amys Story - Special events/ideas (contests, youth-planned
activities) - Involving existing youth organizations (e.g. SADD)
17The Kansas Alliance for Drug Endangered Children
- Provides technical assistance and resources to
county-level DEC programs - Provides leadership, oversight and advocacy at
the state level - Provides training on various aspects of DEC
- Develop educational materials, including video
for providing medical protocol training
18Other Strategies
- Media Strategies
- Press releases
- News conferences
- Website
- Print/broadcast Public Service Announcements
- Billboards
- Legislative Advocacy
- Legislative alerts
- Action alerts
- Testimony
- Contacting Legislators
- One-page policy brief
19Kansas Schedule V Legislation
- Effective June 1, 2005
- Placement Access
- Products containing psudoephedrine/ephedrine sold
only by licensed pharmacists (3 packages within a
7 day period) - Photo identification and signature required
- Must be at least 18 years of age
- Liquids, liquid capsules and gel caps are exempt
- Lab seizures down over 80 since law took effect
20Resources for Communities
- Mini-grant funding (Kansas communities only)
- Ongoing technical assistance and training
- Community Meth Prevention Kit containing
prevention strategy manual, CD-Rom, videos and
other materials - Quick reference safety tip cards for various
professions - Educational materials for community distribution
- PowerPoint presentations for multiple target
audiences - Videos for retailers, youth, parents, law
enforcement, and other audiences - Drug paraphernalia community action materials
- School meth prevention curriculum
- Quarterly E-Newsletter
- Website www.ksmethpreventionproject.org
21Contact Information for the Kansas
Methamphetamine Prevention Project
- Cristi Cain, Coordinator
- Loretta Wyrick Severin, Asst. Coordinator
- 2209 SW 29th Street
- Topeka, KS 66611
- (785) 266-8666/Fax (785) 266-3833
- ccain_at_parstopeka.com
- lwyrick_at_parstopeka.com
- www.ksmethpreventionproject.org