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News (Media Awareness Project) - US: Employers Offer Drug Information
Title:US: Employers Offer Drug Information
Published On:2002-04-22
Source:Oklahoman, The (OK)
Fetched On:2008-01-23 12:11:28
EMPLOYERS OFFER DRUG INFORMATION

NEW YORK -- At school, children are exposed to all sorts of new things:
advancements in science, the most up-to-date computer language, the hottest
fashions, hippest phrases and, possibly, the newest illegal drugs. Parents,
who often spend most of the day at office desks, don't always have the
resources to teach them the same things.

Not knowing what their children know puts parents at an immediate
disadvantage in their efforts to keep their household drug-free, says John
Walters, the nation's drug czar.

And if parents think drugs are not an issue, "that's wishful thinking,"
Walters says.

To put parents in the same loop as their children, the Office of National
Drug Control Policy, which Walters oversees, has launched the At Work
Program as part of its National Youth Anti-Drug Media Campaign. Through the
initiative, partner employers will disseminate information advising and
encouraging parents on how to have an open line of communication about
drugs with their children.

The anti-drug campaign will provide articles that can be included in
company newsletters and Intranet sites, links to local drug-prevention
resources and information about ordering parenting brochures.

A how-to pamphlet offers scores of tips about listening to children,
warning them about drugs and what to do if drugs are a problem.

"We're trying to get parents to be proactive," Walters says. "Kids who hear
about the risks of drugs directly from their parents are more receptive."

The program aims to provide a sophisticated yet user friendly delivery
system answering questions such as "What is Ecstasy?" and "Who do I go to
at the school if I suspect a problem?"

Being able to talk about these topics with colleagues at work should be a
valuable asset to parents.

"It's helpful to talk with another parent about tough choices. There's a
lot of native knowledge of experience out there," Walters says. "Parents
can also do their research and talk, and get information without their kids
in the room asking why there's such an interest in drugs."

As the parent of children ages 13, 11, and 9, Michael Castine, a managing
partner of TMP Worldwide, says he welcomes any tool, any avenue of
communication or any hero to help keep his children off drugs.

"You hear horror stories about kids younger and younger using drugs," he
says. "I'm personally so naive, but I try to keep up. ... We have to try
and stick to their (the kids') level."

Chief executives like to measure things, and profit and productivity are
things they understand. It's no great leap to link a worker's happy home
life to productivity -- which is linked to profit, Forman says.

"In modern times, you deal with the whole worker, which includes the family."
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