July 20, 2011
Forum teaches communities to help deal with addiction
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CHARLESTON, W.Va. -- Workers can't pass drug tests. Kids mimic parents who are doing drugs. Families struggle to find help for addicted loved ones.

Those were some of the issues discussed Wednesday at a forum on prescription drug abuse at the University of Charleston. Ministers, teachers, community leaders and others gathered to talk about the problem.

The West Virginia Center for Civic Life was training them to host community forums throughout the state. 

Participants in the center's Civic Life Institute learn to moderate talks by asking probing questions while staying neutral on the issues. The center trains them on how to gather information from the sessions, and turn it into community action.

The discussion on prescription drug abuse started with examples from people's own lives.

Connie Lupardus of the Central Appalachia Empowerment Zone in Clay said many residents can't pass drug tests.

"We are losing our work force," she said. "We are losing a generation of workers."

A woman who works at a psychiatric hospital said substance abuse is the main problem she sees.

"Finding treatment, it's hard," she said. "And a lot of our children do have to go out of state" to find it.

Many participants placed the blame on doctors. A woman said some physicians give prescriptions meant for terminally ill patients for "minor aches and pains."

"It's ridiculous," she said.

Another said she told her dentist she didn't want a prescription for narcotic painkillers after a procedure, but he wrote her one anyway.

Some said it's a larger cultural problem, pointing to the countless TV commercials that promise to fix people's problems with pills.  

One participant, Barbour County Schools Superintendent Joe Super, said community forums should reach out to the medical community to get their perspectives, too. It's also important to stay up to speed on what state lawmakers are doing, he said.

"There are great positions out there from some of our legislators on these issues," he said.

The group of about 50 people also shared ideas for specific things their community could support to make a dent in West Virginia's prescription drug abuse problem.

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Forum teaches communities to help deal with addiction

CHARLESTON, W.Va. -- Workers can't pass drug tests. Kids mimic parents who are doing drugs. Families struggle to find help for addicted loved ones.

Those were some of the issues discussed Wednesday at a forum on prescription drug abuse at the University of Charleston. Ministers, teachers, community leaders and others gathered to talk about the problem.

The West Virginia Center for Civic Life was training them to host community forums throughout the state. 

Participants in the center's Civic Life Institute learn to moderate talks by asking probing questions while staying neutral on the issues. The center trains them on how to gather information from the sessions, and turn it into community action.

The discussion on prescription drug abuse started with examples from people's own lives.

Connie Lupardus of the Central Appalachia Empowerment Zone in Clay said many residents can't pass drug tests.

"We are losing our work force," she said. "We are losing a generation of workers."

A woman who works at a psychiatric hospital said substance abuse is the main problem she sees.

"Finding treatment, it's hard," she said. "And a lot of our children do have to go out of state" to find it.

Many participants placed the blame on doctors. A woman said some physicians give prescriptions meant for terminally ill patients for "minor aches and pains."

"It's ridiculous," she said.

Another said she told her dentist she didn't want a prescription for narcotic painkillers after a procedure, but he wrote her one anyway.

Some said it's a larger cultural problem, pointing to the countless TV commercials that promise to fix people's problems with pills.  

One participant, Barbour County Schools Superintendent Joe Super, said community forums should reach out to the medical community to get their perspectives, too. It's also important to stay up to speed on what state lawmakers are doing, he said.

"There are great positions out there from some of our legislators on these issues," he said.

The group of about 50 people also shared ideas for specific things their community could support to make a dent in West Virginia's prescription drug abuse problem.

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