| |
Most Popular Websites to Visit
1.
Affiliate Marketing (3)
2.
Attorney Houston Texas (10)
3.
Bible Study (4)
4.
Bill Consolidation Loans (4)
5.
Business (2)
6.
Consumers (4)
7.
Family (1)
8.
Federal Gov. (1)
9.
Find Best Sale Price (20)
10.
General (29)
11.
International (1)
12.
Life Insurance (4)
13.
Office Furniture (6)
14.
Regional (1)
15.
Research (1)
16.
Skydiving in New York (5)
17.
Tinnitus Treatment (6)
18.
Weddings (5)
|
Shopping for information
on Family
1.
Drug and alcohol abuse, treatment, prevention at SAMHSA s National Clearinghouse for Alcohol and Drug Information
SAMHSA
Welcome to Prevention Online, PREVLINE
What's New
Quick Find & Order
Find it fast with this new tool
New Publications
Quick Facts... Addiction African Americans Alcohol American Indians/Alaska Natives Amphetamines Amyl nitrite Analgesics Asian/Pacific Islanders Barbiturates Binge Drinking Children of Substance Abusers Club Drugs Cocaine Codeine Crack Crack Cocaine Depressants Ecstasy Ethnic/Racial Groups Fentanyl Gamma Hydroxy Butyrate (GHB) Hallucinogens Hashish Heroin/Morphine Hispanic/Latinos Inhalants Ketamine Lysergic Acid Diethylamide (LSD) Marijuana Mescaline Methamphetamines Methaqualone Nicotine Nitrous Oxide Opiates/Narcotics Parents/Caregivers Phencyclidine (PCP) Prescription Drugs Psilocybin/Psilocin Rohypnol Steroids Teens Tobacco Women Workplace
PATS Study 2003: Ecstasy Ranks Last on the List of Drugs Parents Talk with Kids About; Second Phase of National Campaign
Despite increases in teen Ecstasy use over the past few years, American parents are far less likely to talk with their kids about Ecstasy than any drug -- legal or illegal, according to a national survey released today by the Partnership for a Drug-Free America®.
View Streaming Video of the Press Conference
Halloween Can Be Spooktacular Without Being Downright Scary
Halloween can be a scary time for parents of small children and teenagers, but it doesn't have to be dangerous. Parents can take precautions to keep their kids and teenagers safe and healthy.
Red Ribbon Week Community Action Guide
Download the 2003 Red Ribbon Week Community Action Guide and help encourage individuals and families in your community to take a stand against the use of alcohol, tobacco, and illegal drugs.
Steer Clear of Pot
The National Youth Anti-Drug Media Campaign has partnered with GEICO, the National Highway Transportation Safety Administration (NHTSA) and other driving-safety leaders to offer several free resources for parents and youth to help keep teens marijuana and drug free, before they get behind the wheel of a car.
Search:
Publications
Site
NSAWI
E-mail this Page
Print this Page
Join NCADI Update
Contact Us
Home
top
Family
Order Publications and Materials Related to Parents & Caregivers
A Family Guide To Keeping Youth Mentally Healthy & Drug Free
A Family Guide To Keeping Youth Mentally Healthy & Drug Free is a public education Web site developed to communicate to parents and other caring adults about how they can help promote their child's mental health and reduce his or her risk for becoming involved with alcohol, tobacco, and illegal drugs.
15+ Make Time To Listen, Take Time To Talk (School Violence)
15+ Make Time To Listen, Take Time To Talk is a Center for Mental Health Services (CMHS) campaign designed to provide practical guidance to parents and caregivers about how to make time to effectively communicate with their children. The campaign is based on the premise that parents who talk with their children about what is happening in their lives are better able to guide their children toward more positive, skill-enhancing activities and friendships.
Caring for Every Child's Mental Health Campaign
The Caring for Every Child's Mental Health communications campaign began as a national public information and education campaign to 1) increase public awareness about the importance of protecting and nurturing the mental health of young people; 2) foster recognition that many children have mental health problems that are real, painful, and sometimes severe; and 3) encourage caregivers to seek early, appropriate treatment and services. The campaign helps families, educators, health care providers, and young people recognize mental health problems and to seek or recommend appropriate services. It also strives to reduce the stigma associated with mental health problems.
Listening Dads Are Champs
CMHS, in partnership with the Baltimore Ravens football team and the National Campaign Against Youth Violence, has launched a project in Baltimore, MD, to raise awareness about the importance of fathers and male caregivers spending time each day listening and talking with their children. The Listening Dads Are Champs project is part of the national CMHS campaign, 15+ Make Time To Listen, Take Time To Talk, which involves mothers, fathers, and caregivers of children throughout the country.
Parenting Is Prevention
Parenting Is Prevention is a site dedicated to parents who want to keep their children drug free. It offers information and tips concerning substance abuse prevention, publications, weekly updates, and resource links to various substance abuse prevention agencies.
Partnership to Prevent Fetal Alcohol Syndrome
The Partnership to Prevent Fetal Alcohol Syndrome unites communities nationwide in a public health response to prevent fetal alcohol syndrome and alcohol-related birth defects.
Recovery Month 2001: Family, Friends, and Community
Recovery Month is an annual event that highlights the benefits of substance abuse treatment, honors the contributions of treatment providers, and promotes the message that recovery from substance abuse in all its forms is possible. Recovery Month encourages people to help expand and improve the availability of effective substance abuse treatment for those in need. A new theme or emphasis is selected every year. The theme of the 2001 celebration was "We Recover Together: Family, Friends, and Community."
Starting Early Starting Smart
SESS is a knowledge development initiative designed to create and test a new model for providing integrated services (mental health and substance abuse prevention and treatment) for young children (birth to 7 years) and their families. SESS also was designed to inform practitioners and policymakers of successful interventions and promising practices from the multiyear study, which lay a critical foundation for the positive growth and development of very young children.
|