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Do drug-using students need to stay in school?

In developing a treatment program the central question is:. Do drug-using students need to stay in school?. NEOSHO R-5 DRUG POLICY MEETING AUGUST 25, 2011 AGENDA Introduction Status Quo Goal

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Do drug-using students need to stay in school?

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  1. In developing a treatment program the central question is: Do drug-using students need to stay in school?

  2. NEOSHO R-5 DRUG • POLICY MEETING • AUGUST 25, 2011 • AGENDA • Introduction • Status Quo • Goal • Create system to properly respond and address student drug related offenses.

  3. Type of Drug-Related Offenses • A. Intoxication • B. Possession/Distribution • C. Gray Area • Drug Assessment • A. Who, When and Why • B. Cost • Brain Storming • A. Accountability (Consequences for Actions) • B. Sanctions • C. Treatment Options • VII. Wrap Up/ Where do we go from here?

  4. Neosho Police Department Mike Sharp Pete Russell Dustin Whitehill Neosho School Board Caroline Perigo Mike Stoufer Lynn Otey Brett Day Phil Wise Steve Douglas Neosho School Administrators Newton County Drug Court Team

  5. DESCRIPTION OF THE NEOSHO R-5 DRUGCOURT PROGRAM

  6. Judge Drug Court Administrator Juvenile Officer School Resource Officer Guardian Ad-Litem /Attorney Children's Division Treatment

  7. Juvenile Drug Court • Intensive treatment program to provide specialized services to: a.) Students; b.) Families • Judicial Involvement and Supervision

  8. Intensive Treatment Program Provides intensive and continuous judicial supervision over substance abuse juveniles by: Coordinated and supervised delivery of an array of support services necessary to address the problem such as: a.) Substance Abuse Treatment b.) Psychological Therapy c.) Family Counseling d.) Education e.) Mentoring

  9. DEVELOPMENTALLY APPROPRIATE SERVICES

  10. Alcohol and Other Drug Abuse, Dependence and Problem Use Peaks at Age 20 Over 90% of use and problems start between the ages of 12-20 It takes decades before most recover or die 100 People with drug dependence die an average of 22.5 years sooner than those without a diagnosis 90 Percentage 80 70 60 Severity Category 50 Other drug or heavy alcohol use in the past year 40 30 Alcohol or Drug Use (AOD) Abuse or Dependence in the past year 20 10 0 65+ 12-13 14-15 16-17 18-20 21-29 30-34 35-49 50-64 Age 11 Source: 2002 NSDUH and Dennis & Scott, 2007, Neumark et al., 2000

  11. Adolescents who use weekly or more often are more likely during the past year to have .. Source: Dennis, White & Ives, 2009 12

  12. pain Adolescent Brain Development Occurs from the Inside to Out and from Back to Front Photo courtesy of the NIDA Web site. From A Slide Teaching Packet: The Brain and the Actions of Cocaine, Opiates, and Marijuana. 13

  13. Prolonged Substance Use Injures The Brain: Healing Takes Time Normal levels of brain activity in PET scans show up in yellow to red Normal Reduced brain activity after regular use can be seen even after 10 days of abstinence 10 days of abstinence After 100 days of abstinence, we can see brain activity “starting” to recover 100 days of abstinence Source: Volkow ND, Hitzemann R, Wang C-I, Fowler IS, Wolf AP, Dewey SL. Long-term frontal brain metabolic changes in cocaine abusers. Synapse 11:184-190, 1992; Volkow ND, Fowler JS, Wang G-J, Hitzemann R, Logan J, Schlyer D, Dewey 5, Wolf AP. Decreased dopamine D2 receptor availability is associated with reduced frontal metabolism in cocaine abusers. Synapse 14:169-177, 1993. 14

  14. Schedule frequent judicial reviews and be sensitive to the effect that court proceedings can have on youth and their families.

  15. Typical Issues • Attendance • Grades • Behavior • Relapse

  16. Attendance You miss a day of school the student has to see the School Resource Officer the next day. Zero Tolerance for those who have missed three days of school. By zero tolerance each student shall go to school everyday, if the student believes they are ill they are to check in with the school nurse.

  17. Grades and absences are reported at every court appearance.

  18. Neosho R-5 Juvenile Drug Court Program, works with the school on a daily basis. TEACHERS/TUTORS

  19. TEACHERS/TUTORS

  20. MENTORING

  21. Our Mentors are juveniles who have successfully completed the Neosho R-5 Drug Court Program

  22. BEHAVIOR A key component for the integrity of the program is holding each student accountable for their actions.

  23. Sanctions

  24. COMMUNITY SERVICE

  25. TEACHERS/COMMUNITY SERVICE SUPREVISORS

  26. Community Project Tornado Relief

  27. Essays • a. How am I like and not like Eddie Haskel • b. Dangers of synthetic marijuana

  28. BOOK REPORTS

  29. HOUSE ARREST

  30. FOCUS ON STRENGTHS

  31. Chip on Shoulder

  32. REWARDS

  33. Relapse

  34. Increase Freedom

  35. Praise

  36. Gift Cards

  37. RELAPSE

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