- NOFOs
- Awards
Main page content
Displaying 1 - 25 out of 30
Award Number | Organization | City | State | Amount | Award FY | NOFO | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
TI026657-04 | SOUTH DAKOTA STATE DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL SERVICES | PIERRE | SD | $1,184,530 | 2019 | TI-16-007 | |||
Title: SBIRT
Project Period: 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
The Division of Behavioral Health Prevention Program proposes a comprehensive system of Screening, Brief Intervention, Brief Treatment and Referral to Structured Treatment services including Medicated Assisted Treatment for those individuals addicted to Opioids. The project will be a State wide initiative and will involve three Cohorts of programming implementation to be implemented in phases throughout the five years of the grant. Cohort I, Phase I will include the Avera Medical Health System, which primarily includes the Eastern part of South Dakota, where we will partner with community based programs, prevention and behavioral health treatment programs. Providers selected have licensed behavioral health professionals and licensed or certified substance abuse counselors on staff. During the projects first six months, the required screening tools will be incorporated and Evidenced Based Programming will be approved by a workgroup consisting of behavioral health professionals from the local community provider system. Staff will be trained to conduct the Evidence Based Programs selected. By the seventh month of the project, the screening process within the clinics and community based services will begin. Cohort II and III will replicate the screening tools, screening process and programming in the Central part of the State by focusing on rural health care clinics and clinics operated by Indian Health Services as well as in the Western part of the State with clinics operated by the Regional Healthcare System. Program goals are to: develop organizational relationships and infrastructure for integration of SBIRT services into primary care clinics and community behavioral health systems; develop and implement SBIRT training for primary care, community health, substance abuse prevention and treatment providers; implement SBIRT services in primary care and community behavioral health settings; and monitor quality and evaluate SBIRT implementation and programming.
|
|||||||||
TI026664-04 | RHODE ISLAND DEPT OF BEHAVIORAL HEALTHCARE/DEVELOPMENTAL DISABILITIES/HOSP | CRANSTON | RI | $1,533,557 | 2019 | TI-16-007 | |||
Title: SBIRT
Project Period: 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
Rhode Island SBIRT (RI-SBIRT) will pre-screen approximately 30,000 individuals in year 1 and 55,000 individuals in years 2-5. The screening will cover tobacco, alcohol, marijuana and other drugs and be delivered to individuals in primary care and health centers, emergency departments, and the Department of Corrections. RI-SBIRT will be incorporated into several State priority initiatives providing connection to health and behavioral care services. These initiatives include Discharge Planning, the State Innovations Model (SIM) and the Health Equity Zones (HEZ). Through the SIM initiative, a grant focusing on the integration of health and behavioral health care across the life span, Rhode Island has created an interagency Staff Team that includes the Departments under the umbrella of the Executive Office of Health and Human Services: BHDDH, RIDOH, the Department of Human Services and the Division of Medicaid, the Office of the Health Insurance Commissioner, and Rhode Island's state health insurance exchange, HealthSource RI. The interagency team will be used as the RI-SBIRT Policy Committee post award for program implementation and policy development and to work with the Project Director to address barriers and gaps, continuously reassessing the project and making adjustments where needed. The goals of RI-SBIRT include: 1) improve the behavioral health outcomes for adults with substance use disorders; which will be achieved providing brief intervention and referral to treatment; 2) increase access to screening services to adults with primary care/health clinic settings, which will be done by training and placing Health Educators and Patient Navigators in health settings; 3) sustain and expand the RI-SBIRT throughout the State by implementing policy and payment reform, which will be the priority of the Policy Steering Committee.
|
|||||||||
TI026666-04 | PENNSYLVANIA STATE DEPARTMENT OF DRUG AND ALCOHOL PROGRAMS | HARRISBURG | PA | $1,642,566 | 2019 | TI-16-007 | |||
Title: SBIRT
Project Period: 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
Pennsylvania Screening, Brief Intervention and Referral to Treatment (PA-SBIRT) is being proposed by the Department of Drug and Alcohol Programs (DDAP) for the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. PA-SBIRT will implement SBIRT training and protocols in seven primary care and community healthcare clinic sites. PA-SBIRT will use evidence-based practices using AUDIT -C, DAST and PHQ-2 screens to assess patients for harmful alcohol and drug use and co-occurring symptoms for mental health disorders. Brief interventions will be conducted with patients using the brief negotiated interview (BNI) model based on motivational interviewing principles. The project will utilize a Care Coordinator in each site who will help with the "warm-handoff' to treatment centers for patients referred to specialty substance use treatment or medication assisted treatment (MAT). These coordinators will also help track and follow-up with patients throughout the course of the project. The project team is partnering with Single County Authorities (SCAs) and local treatment providers to ensure that patients referred during the course of the five-year project are able to access the necessary treatment at the appropriate level of care. The program will also integrate health information technology (HIT) in the healthcare practices to ensure uniformity in tracking patients and ensuring their access to treatment. The Program Evaluation and Research Unit (PERU) part of the University of Pittsburgh School of Pharmacy and Directed by Dr. Janice Pringle, PhD will be leading and facilitating all evaluation efforts required for the project including continuous quality improvement efforts. The project director is Justin White, of DDAP, who has 10 years of experience with drug and alcohol intervention, treatment and education programs.
|
|||||||||
TI026662-04 | OKLAHOMA DEPT OF MENTAL HLTH/SUBS ABUSE | OKLAHOMA CITY | OK | $1,037,621 | 2019 | TI-16-007 | |||
Title: SBIRT
Project Period: 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
The Oklahoma Department of Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services will partner with Community Health Centers Inc. to develop a Screening, Brief Intervention, and Referral to Treatment (SBIRT) system change initiative (SBIRT OK). SBIRT OK will implement SBIRT practices in six primary care clinics serving medically underserved populations as well as students seeking medical and counseling services at the University of Central Oklahoma. SBIRT OK will lay the foundation for a fully integrated behavioral health primary care delivery model. SBIRT OK's goals are to: (1) expand the continuum of care in Oklahoma healthcare settings to include universal and integrated SBIRT; and (2) develop the state-level infrastructure necessary to implement sustainable SBIRT services in Oklahoma. SBIRT OK will administer approximately 18,000 screens annually and a total of 91,000 screens to adult and university patients over 5 years. The project will significantly increase the number of primary and specialty healthcare patients receiving SBIRT services; decrease patient use/misuse of substances; address co-occurring behavioral health problems; promote abstinence from tobacco; and improve health and cost outcomes for participating patients and health systems. Through strategic implementation, evaluation, and promotion of SBIRT OK, Oklahoma will achieve a sustainable and replicable service model.
|
|||||||||
TI026667-04 | MUSCOGEE CREEK NATION | OKMULGEE | OK | $1,658,375 | 2019 | TI-16-007 | |||
Title: SBIRT
Project Period: 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
The Muscogee (Creek) Nation seeks to establish and maintain Screening, Brief Intervention, and Referral to Therapy (SBIRT) in the tribal clinics and hospital located within the area of north- central Oklahoma served by the tribe. This shared vision shall expand and enhance the continuum of care for substance abuse services, reduce alcohol and drug abuse and their negative impact on health, increase abstinence, reduce costly health utilization, and improve tribal health. Utilizing inclusive population-level screening, evidenced-based practices, and an aggressive care coordination and referral process that makes use of existing and newly established resources, the project shall provide the foundation for delivering and sustaining effective, efficient, and culturally appropriate substance abuse treatment services to adults in our large rural non- reservation American Indian population. The Creek Nation Many Paths project shall further identify and define the need for services, the gaps between needed and available services, barriers to services, and other problems related to the need to implement substance abuse screening and treatment services for American Indian adults. The project will serve 3,805 American Indians over the course of the project. The target population is rural non-reservation American Indian adults. Many Paths program goals are to: (1) establish, implement, and maintain SBIRT for American Indian adults who reside within the area of Oklahoma served by the Creek Nation; (2) provide treatment and ultimately reduce the prevalence of substance abuse and its impact upon American Indian adults and families who have experienced or are at risk to experience substance abuse; (3) promote systems level change at the tribal level to embrace substance abuse treatment and prevention as a core strategy.
|
|||||||||
TI026663-04 | HAWAII STATE DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH -- ALCOHOL AND DRUG ABUSE DIVISION | KAPOLEI | HI | $1,590,212 | 2019 | TI-16-007 | |||
Title: SBIRT
Project Period: 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
The Hawaii Screening, Brief lntervention and Referral to Treatment (HI-SBIRT) project incorporates SBIRT services into primary care settings across the State. HI-SBIRT estimates that approximately 3,250 screenings, 2,340 brief interventions and 780 brief treatments or referrals to treatment will be completed in year one. The initial settings for HI-SBIRT implementation as a standard practice will be six of the State's Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHCs). These FQHCs serve unique communities at increased risk for health disparities, and include specific subpopulations such as individuals experiencing homelessness, immigrants from Micronesia, individuals with limited English-proficiency, adults with serious mental illness, specific ethnic populations with a disproportionate burden of chronic disease, LGBTQ individuals, and persons with or at risk for HIV/AIDS. As the project progresses, SBIRT practices will expand to 25 smaller non-FQHC primary care practices which will help increase the participant base and further incorporate SBIRT as a standard of primary care at all levels throughout the State. At its closing, the project's impact will be reflected in several key ways including: a higher degree of cross-professional training in SBIRT practices among primary and behavioral health professionals; a more proactive approach to addressing emerging healthcare issues (preventative healthcare) which will decrease the resources needed to treat chronic conditions (reactive healthcare ); defining a concrete referral system for individuals in need of substance abuse treatment that leaves little room for patients to "fall through the cracks;" and expanding the use of health information technology (HIT) to serve a dual purpose of 1) appropriate and timely sharing of vital patient information that better informs decision making at the point of care and 2) increasing and enhancing health data collection in a more cohesive and standardized manner.
|
|||||||||
TI026665-04 | DEPARTMENT OF BEHAVIORAL HEALTH AND DEVELOPMENTAL SERVICES | RICHMOND | VA | $1,547,206 | 2019 | TI-16-007 | |||
Title: SBIRT
Project Period: 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
The proposed Virginia Screening, Brief Intervention, and Referral to Treatment (VA-SBIRT) project will be a statewide initiative that aims to develop and implement a sustainable model to increase provider training and statewide access to screening, prevention, early intervention, and treatment for substance use disorders with a focus on serving the Northern Virginia and Shenandoah Valley regions. The other three regions of the state will be afforded access to training, coaching and implementation tools. Virginia is a large and diverse state, with significant concerns around substance use that span its diverse geographic, socio-economic, and ethnic strata. VA-SBIRT's population of focus is adults 18 and over in Virginia primary care and community healthcare settings including those with and without health insurance being seen at emergency departments, county health departments, free clinics, federally qualified health centers, student health centers, and specialty clinics. VA-SBIRT's targeted specialty populations include a large student health population through three campuses at George Mason University (GMU) and patients being seen at the Prince William Health Department Sexually Transmitted Disease clinic, spanning three large, dense counties in Northern Virginia. Over the 5 year grant period, SBIRT interventions will be delivered statewide to a minimum of 20,000 unduplicated adults. In addition, GMU will develop a central data repository for all practice and referral sites. GMU will then facilitate connection to Virginia's health information exchange, ConnectVirginia, for all participating practice and referral sites.
|
|||||||||
SP022113-04 | WYOMING STATE DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH | CHEYENNE | WY | $1,000,000 | 2019 | SP-16-005 | |||
Title: PDO
Project Period: 2016/09/01 - 2021/08/31
The Wyoming PDO programs aims to develop the infrastructure necessary to increase access and use of naloxone through funding, distribution, and collaborative training and education. The Wyoming PDO will implement evidence-based prevention strategies on state and community levels, targeting communities of high need. Program goals include: 1) Enhance system capacity/infrastructure, 2) Improve data infrastructure, and 3) Develop and implement an effective and comprehensive strategic prevention plan. The Strategic Prevention Framework (SPF) public health model, as well as SAMHSA's Opioid Overdose Prevention Toolkit will be fully utilized to implement data- driven and comprehensive opioid overdose prevention plans.
|
|||||||||
SP021668-09 | YORK HOSPITAL | YORK | ME | $125,000 | 2019 | SP-16-001 | |||
Title: DFC
Project Period: 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
The coalition will prevent and reduce youth substance use by implementing the following strategies: sustaining collaboration of the community health coalition members and partners; working with police to support the effective enforcement of youth alcohol and drug laws; restricting access to alcohol, marijuana and prescription drugs through policy work and education; supporting schools to use evidence based substance abuse prevention practices and curriculum; Supporting parents to raise healthy alcohol and drug free families; and empowering youth to be leaders in health education and community change.
|
|||||||||
SP021442-04 | YOUNG MEN'S CHRISTIAN ASSOCIATION OF RYE, NY | RYE | NY | $125,000 | 2019 | SP-16-001 | |||
Title: DFC
Project Period: 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
The coalition will prevent and reduce youth substance use by implementing the following strategies: reduce the availability of alcohol, marijuana, and prescription drugs; change the culture and context within which decisions about substance use are made, and shift the consequences associated with youth substance abuse.
|
|||||||||
SP021431-04 | YOUTH FIRST | FAIRMONT | MN | $125,000 | 2019 | SP-16-001 | |||
Title: DFC
Project Period: 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
The coalition will prevent and reduce youth substance use by implementing the following strategies: expansion of our coalition county-wide and the formation of focus groups made up of stakeholders from all four school districts of the county. These focus groups will work together to increase positive messaging to our youth, reduce youth access to harmful substances, and correct youth misperceptions regarding the risk of harm of substance use.
|
|||||||||
SP021884-04 | YOUTH SERVICES, INC. | BRATTLEBORO | VT | $47,145 | 2019 | SP-16-007 | |||
Title: Sober Truth on Preventing Underage Drinking Act
Project Period: 2016/09/30 - 2020/09/29
The Coalition will prevent and reduce youth substance use by implementing the following strategies: Create community change, address barriers to and strengthen collaboration among communities; Enhance intergovernmental cooperation and coordination; implement town hall meetings; Develop action plans; and implement strategies to address health disparities among determined subpopulations that include community education, promoting social norm messages; Enhancing and implementing best practices; Enriching current partnerships and fostering collaboration opportunities with various sectors, creating policy and environmental change, and increasing youth skill-development and involvement opportunities.
|
|||||||||
SP021992-04 | YUKON SCHOOL DISTRICT | YUKON | OK | $47,145 | 2019 | SP-16-007 | |||
Title: Sober Truth on Preventing Underage Drinking Act
Project Period: 2016/09/30 - 2020/09/29
The Coalition will prevent and reduce youth substance use by implementing the following strategies: Parent education; increasing minority youth participation in youth leadership development; expansion of the Coalition's impact by researching and offering community college students a customized alcohol intervention program; student-run public forum and public awareness campaign; and Town Hall Meetings on Underage Drinking.
|
|||||||||
TI026659-04 | ALABAMA STATE DEPT OF MTL HLTH & MTL RET | MONTGOMERY | AL | $1,655,724 | 2019 | TI-16-007 | |||
Title: SBIRT
Project Period: 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
AL-SBIRT: Screening, Brief Intervention, and Referral to Treatment in Alabama proposes to implement SBIRT practices in West Alabama that will cover alcohol, tobacco, and drug use in patients at two Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHC) and one VA Medical Center (VAMC). The program design is guided by the need to reduce harmful and hazardous alcohol and drug use, improve associated mental health problems, reduce related healthcare costs, and to close the treatment gap between residents who have a substance abuse problem and those receiving services. The target population has health disparities due to lower income status, lack of insurance and financial resources, and a lack of a regular source of care. AL-SBIRT program staff will work with the clinical partners to incorporate SBIRT into their operations. A Health Educator will work with the FQHCs and the VAMC to provide education to both clinicians and patients on health, substance use, and mental health. Public service announcements will be used throughout the project to increase awareness and service utilization. Licensed Counselor/Social Workers will be placed at the points of care to conduct SBIRT and provide care coordination and follow-up. A specialized referral process has been developed with the Alabama Department of Mental Health and Opioid Treatment Centers. Transportation and language assistance will also be available. The project goals and objectives are to: increase access to SBIRT for adults in primary care settings; ensure SBIRT as the standard of care in Alabama's healthcare settings; improve health and behavioral outcomes among adults, including veterans, with substance use disorders and with co- occurring mental illness. The project will pre-screen 17,793 adults annually, for a five-year project total of 88,965. Of this total, 26,690 will receive a full assessment and at least brief intervention.
|
|||||||||
SP022106-04 | VERMONT STATE AGENCY OF HUMAN SERVICES | WATERBURY | VT | $371,616 | 2019 | SP-16-006 | |||
Title: SPF Rx
Project Period: 2016/09/01 - 2021/08/31
Vermont will apply the existing state-wide SPF infrastructure to prevent prescription drug misuse by increasing public knowledge of the risks of misuse and by increasing the role and skills of pediatricians in reducing access among youth and young adults. Prescription drug monitoring program (PDMP) data will be included in community needs assessments and inform the evaluation of current and future prevention programming. The statewide goal for this grant is to increase awareness of safe use, storage, and proper disposal of prescription medication and decrease prescription drug misuse and abuse among Vermonters age 12-17 and 18 years and older.
|
|||||||||
SP021912-04 | VISTA COMMUNITY CLINIC | VISTA | CA | $47,145 | 2019 | SP-16-007 | |||
Title: Sober Truth on Preventing Underage Drinking Act
Project Period: 2016/09/30 - 2020/09/29
The Coalition will prevent and reduce youth substance use by implementing the following strategies: Increasing involvement and education of parents and community stakeholders to bring awareness to the problem of underage drinking and the community's role in its solution; A social norms approach to normalize good decision-making; Offering Life Skills Parents Curriculum Training and Youth Mental Health First Aid courses to educate parents on the issues of younger students as related to alcohol use, and to help them build stronger prevention skills; Engaging more community partners in sponsoring safe and healthy activities that appeal to youth in the pre-teen and early teen years; Hosting Town Hall Meetings annually that maintains a community conversation about underage drinking and a shared responsibility for prevention.
|
|||||||||
SP021640-04 | WASHOUGAL SCHOOL DISTRICT #112 | WASHOUGAL | WA | $125,000 | 2019 | SP-16-001 | |||
Title: DFC
Project Period: 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
The coalition will prevent and reduce youth substance use by implementing the following strategies: positive social norms; working with area retailers to reduce access to alcohol; engage with youth around leadership and skill development; working to inform parents about the consequences of social hosting and encouraging parents to talk to their children about the dangers and consequences of underage drinking and marijuana use.
|
|||||||||
SP022145-04 | WEST VIRGINIA STATE DEPT HLTH/HUMAN RSCS | CHARLESTON | WV | $429,812 | 2019 | SP-16-005 | |||
Title: PDO
Project Period: 2016/09/01 - 2021/08/31
The purpose of the West Virginia (WV) PDO program is to address the current overdose epidemic in WV by implementing and supporting a data-driven and collaborative process for preventing overdose-related deaths and adverse events among adults in high-risk WV communities. Goals of the program include (1) Reduce the number of Rx and illicit opioid overdose-related deaths and adverse events among persons aged 18 +and (2) Coordinate state- level overdose mortality, morbidity and prescription monitoring surveillance, prevention practice, and policy activities addressing Rx and illicit opioid overdose deaths and other adverse events among individuals aged 18+.
|
|||||||||
SP022090-04 | WEST VIRGINIA STATE DEPT HLTH/HUMAN RSCS | CHARLESTON | WV | $369,237 | 2019 | SP-16-006 | |||
Title: SPF Rx
Project Period: 2016/09/01 - 2021/08/31
WV SPF Rx program is to enhance and expand infrastructure and develop and implement prescription drug prevention efforts in West Virginia. Goals of the program include (1) To enhance the state's SPF-based prevention infrastructure to address prescription drug misuse among youth ages 12-17 and adults 18 years of age and older; and (2) To prevent and reduce prescription drug and illicit opioid misuse and abuse. The program will target the following prevention priorities to achieve its goals and objectives: Needs Assessment, Strategic Planning, Financing/Coordination of Funding Streams, Organizational/Structural Change, Development of Interagency Coordination Mechanisms, and Policy development to support needed service system improvements, Quality Improvement, Performance Measure Development, and Workforce Development.
|
|||||||||
SP022112-04 | WISCONSIN DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH SERVICES | MADISON | WI | $1,000,000 | 2019 | SP-16-005 | |||
Title: PDO
Project Period: 2016/09/01 - 2021/08/31
The Wisconsin Prescription Drug/Opioid Overdose-Related Deaths Prevention Project (WI-PDO) will focus on the reduction of deaths and adverse events among individuals ages 18 years and older by training first responders and other key community sectors on the prevention of overdose-related deaths and implementing secondary prevention strategies, including the purchase and distribution of naloxone to first responders. Evidence-based prevention efforts for reducing problems related to the non-medical use of opioids will be funded in three high need counties in the first year. Wisconsin will use a comprehensive approach focusing on two main goals: 1) Reduce the number of opioid overdose-related deaths and adverse events by 10% among individual's ages 18 years and older; and 2) Develop and implement a comprehensive secondary prevention campaign to address opioid overdose-related deaths and adverse events in high risk communities.
|
|||||||||
SP022103-04 | WISCONSIN DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH SERVICES | MADISON | WI | $371,616 | 2019 | SP-16-006 | |||
Title: SPF Rx
Project Period: 2016/09/01 - 2021/08/31
WI SPF- Rx will focus on raising awareness about the risks of sharing medications and overprescribing prescription medications. Wisconsin's proposed plan will target high need areas and populations of the state identified through a needs assessment process in project year one. Prescription Drug Monitoring Program data will be used in this assessment to identify areas of high prescribing, or at high risk for prescription drug misuse, and support the development of a comprehensive strategic plan. Wisconsin will use a comprehensive approach focusing on two main goals: 1) Reduce prescription drug misuse and related consequences among individuals 12 years of age and older; and 2) Establish a statewide systematic surveillance system to track trends in prescription drug misuse and abuse.
|
|||||||||
SP021434-04 | TOWN OF NEW CASTLE | CHAPPAQUA | NY | $125,000 | 2019 | SP-16-001 | |||
Title: DFC
Project Period: 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
The coalition will prevent and reduce youth substance use by implementing the following strategies: reduce the availability of alcohol, marijuana, and prescription drugs; change the culture and context within which decisions about substance use are made, and shift the consequences associated with youth substance abuse; conducting alcohol compliance checks, prevention messaging campaigns for parents and youth; increasing surveillance of areas known for youth drug use; and enhancing school and community policies.
|
|||||||||
SP021409-04 | TOWN OF NORTH READING | NORTH READING | MA | $125,000 | 2019 | SP-16-001 | |||
Title: DFC
Project Period: 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
The coalition will prevent and reduce youth substance use by implementing the following strategies: strengthening the coalition membership; increasing involvement of the full range of community organization; providing leadership in the community related to youth substance use prevention; providing information and training to the community; changing the consequences of marijuana and prescription drug use; reducing access to marijuana and prescription drugs to use; and working to change community norms.
|
|||||||||
SP021525-04 | TOWN OF WARE | WARE | MA | $125,000 | 2019 | SP-16-001 | |||
Title: DFC
Project Period: 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
The coalition will prevent and reduce youth substance use by implementing the following strategies: educate youth, parents, public officials, businesses, and community leaders about the health risks and negative consequences related to underage alcohol, marijuana and opioid use; increase consistent establishment, enactment, and enforcement of policies, practices, systems, and laws that prevent substance use across the selected communities; increase parents and student knowledge of and perceptions of the benefits of avoiding alcohol, marijuana, and opioid use in adolescence; strengthen parental and community knowledge, attitudes and skills and increase positive community behavioral norms that help adolescents avoid alcohol, marijuana, and opioid drug use.
|
|||||||||
SP021654-09 | TRI TOWN YOUTH SERVICES BUREAU, INC. | DEEP RIVER | CT | $125,000 | 2019 | SP-16-001 | |||
Title: DFC
Project Period: 2016/09/30 - 2021/09/29
The coalition will prevent and reduce youth substance use by implementing the following strategies: increase the resources and readiness of the Tri-Town Substance Abuse Prevention Coalition to reduce youth substance abuse; ensure that all 12 sectors of the Tri-Town community engage in evidence-based, environmental strategies; change attitudes and behaviors of both youth and adults by increasing penalties for breaking alcohol and drug laws; and conduct local evaluation in order to adjust coalition activities accordingly to maximize reductions in youth substance abuse.
|
Displaying 1 - 25 out of 1777