Prevention education and awareness of substance use and high-risk behaviors should work by having the information you need at a young age so you know how to make choices that help protect and support YOU, your family, and your community.

This education needs to be accessed through our family, school, medical communities, media, faith community, SU Prevention Organizations, law enforcement, and peer-to-peer support — it takes all community sectors to create awareness and offer education on preventing substance use from becoming a chronic concern. 

Community Coalition work is guided by evidence-based frameworks such as the Seven Strategies for Community Change developed by the Community Anti-Drug Coalitions of America (CADCA) and the Strategic Prevention Framework developed by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) and includes activities like:

  • Change or initiate community-wide policies

  • School-based substance use prevention work focuses on developing and implementing policies and practices that support student health and educate them about the dangers of substance use.

  • Designing communication campaigns to modify social norms

  • Hosting events that bring awareness and education to prevent substance use in youth

  • Identifying opportunities for youth to engage in community change

  • Offering youth and parent education and training

If it's predictable, it's preventable --substance use, misuse, abuse, and disorders CAN be prevented.

How? Education and awareness with a broad range of programs positively alter the balance between risk and protective factors for drug use in families, schools, and communities (National Institute on Drug Abuse, NIH).

It takes educating ourselves, families, friends, and communities to understand and support the facts that can and will change the social norms that today support "all teens experiment; it's a right-of-passage, and they will grow out of it." This social norm is NOT the truth, and it's time that our communities get the information necessary to support our youth in substance use prevention.

Preventing substance use concerns in children, adolescents, and young adults is critical to Americans’ behavioral and physical health. If communities and families can intervene early, behavioral health disorders might be prevented or symptoms mitigated - early use of drugs increases a person's chances of having a substance use disorder. Remember, drugs change the brain—and this can lead to addiction and other serious problems. So, preventing the early use of drugs or alcohol may go a long way in reducing these risks (NIH).

 

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We believe prevention is the CURE, but until prevention education and awareness become commonplace, prevention must include knowing where to seek support; that is why our work helped to launch first-of-their-kind initiatives in Oregon, a Recovery High School, and an Alternative Peer Group. With the new legislation, Oregon will open more high schools supporting recovery youth.

Harmony Academy, Oregon’s first recovery high school, and now Rivercrest Academy, join in supporting youth in meeting their academic and personal goals toward post-secondary careers and learning. Collective Roots APG is a family-centered recovery community dedicated to helping families heal from the effects of youth substance use and other high-risk behaviors.

We also support organizations like 4D Recovery, which now has Adolescent Services. 4D Youth’s mission is to empower adolescents aged 14-17 with substance use disorder to find freedom from drugs and alcohol. Offering peer-based recovery services, abstinent-based social support, family support, and collaborative services! Located in the heart of East Portland, the 4D Youth Center is perfectly placed to support youth in the tri-county area.

Our work also supports other initiatives focused on prevention education, awareness, resources, and support, like the ones below:

Teen Advisory Board

The Teen Advisory Board (TAB) is a high school student club at West Linn High School changing how we view and speak of substance use/misuse, dependency, disorders, and mental health promotion. Students of each grade level at West Linn High School comprise the Teen Advisory Board. These courageous, thoughtful, and supportive TAB students are more than 75+ strong today. They provide input and critical feedback to Community Living Above regarding teen and community activities and events that bring awareness, education, and advocacy to support preventing substance use as a youth.

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“Safe Places” for youth to use substances puts them in Harm’s Way! It’s time to learn why…

A public health media campaign designed by Prevention Action Alliance, Parents Who Host Lose The Most, helps prevent underage drinking in the community by educating parents that it’s unsafe, unhealthy, and, in many communities, against the law to provide substances to youth.

We were taught to take the keys and create safe places to keep each other safe. Now, there is more to the story, and those safe places are putting our young people in harm’s way.

Let’s change the “all kids experiment; it’s a right of passage” narrative to one where delaying use is the path because it’s about protecting the brain, understanding the importance of risk and protective factors, and promoting health choices so all youth thrive.

Real Talk about Fake Pills

Illicit Fentanyl is dominating the drug landscape and causing record drug deaths in America, particularly among our Gen Z youth. Learn the facts about fentanyl and take empowered action to protect yourself and your loved ones. Get INFORMED

Click here to learn more about facts and data, get classroom materials, middle and high school toolkits, and more.

The New Drug Talk / Song for Charlie. Fentanyl has changed the drug landscape, and we must change how we talk to kids about it. This site provides education, free tools, and expert advice to help California families connect and stay safe.

 

Oregon News, Data, and Advocacy

News:

Community Living Above, 2022 Recipient in Oregon, The Drug-Free Communities (DFC) Support Program is the nation’s leading effort to mobilize communities to prevent and reduce substance use among youth. Created in 1997 by the Drug-Free Communities Act, administered by the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP), and managed through a partnership between ONDCP and CDC, the DFC program provides grants to community coalitions to strengthen the infrastructure among local partners to create and sustain a reduction in local youth substance use.

Oregon is #2 in the country for addiction and 50th in access to treatment for Substance Use, and deaths soared during the pandemic. Portland, OR—2020 data from the National Survey on Drug Use and Health, conducted by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) of the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services, reveals that Oregon now ranks 2nd in the country for substance use disorder—up from 4th in 2019—with 18.22% of the population suffering from addiction to alcohol and drugs. That’s nearly 1 in 5 Oregonians.

Laws & Data:

Advocacy:

Oregon Recovers is building a broad, inclusive coalition and waging an aggressive campaign to make Oregon the "Recovery State." We are tackling the addiction crisis head-on by building a statewide movement focused on implementing a comprehensive policy agenda to move Oregon from last to first in access to safe, effective, and immediate addiction treatment and recovery support services.

Alcohol and Drug Policy Commission is an independent state government agency created by the Oregon Legislature to improve the effectiveness and efficiency of state and local Substance Use Disorder (SUD) prevention, treatment, and recovery services for all Oregonians.

The Alcohol and Drug Policy Commission (ADPC) aims to improve the effectiveness and efficiency of state and local SUD prevention, treatment, and recovery services for all Oregonians. Click here to learn more about the Statewide Strategic Plan.

Healing for families and communities starts when substance use and high-risk behavior prevention education is discussed and shared in our homes, schools, healthcare systems, law enforcement agencies, local/state governments, faith communities, anywhere community members thrive, and more often the prevention focus needs to be on our youth.

It’s time to Engage, Educate, and Empower ourselves and members of our community.

Together anything is possible!