another death due to drug over dose
Last week there was another death due to drug over dose in Dharamshala. He was from Amdo Naba and he is 26 years old. he came to India at the age of five and he has never seen his family since then. He studied in TCV school and studied thanka Painting from TCV vocational training center pathlikul, in North India. A monk friend of him was telling me he has never spoke to his mother for last four years due to dialect issue(since he could not speak in Amdo dialect ).
Last year he was being rehabilitated at Zhedhe Khangsar, Dharadun. He was discharge earlier this after the completion of his rehabilitation program. We at kunphen has been talking to him and trying to help him ever since he came here. We offered him a job in our paper project but he didn’t turn in. Its very breaking when some one dies of own made death. Read more
Drug Abuse Bad For Our Economy
West Virginia’s top economic development concern may not involve coal, natural gas or the lingering effects of the recession. It may be drug abuse.
Alcohol- and drug-related crimes cost the state $429 million last year, according to a study by the West Virginia Prevention Resource Center. That is just the cost of investigating and prosecuting crimes resulting from substance abuse, and housing those imprisoned for it.
But as U.S. Sen. Joe Manchin, D-W.Va., has pointed out, that is just the tip of the iceberg. Employers have complained to him they have trouble filling job vacancies because of drug and alcohol abuse.
Educators are painfully aware of the problem. Children hooked on alcohol or other drugs usually do poorly in school. When their parents or guardians are substance abusers, the all-important education support network is weakened – or collapses entirely.
The problem may be growing worse. As many as 152,000 Mountain State residents have substance abuse problems, studies estimate.
These are not numbers pulled out of the air. Drug overdoses are now the leading cause of death for West Virginians under 45 years of age. The number of overdose deaths increased 550 percent from 1994 to 2004.
A shocking study in 2009, conducted at eight hospitals in the state, found 20 percent of babies born there had been exposed to drugs while still in the womb. Last year, one of those hospitals did a follow-up test involving babies’ umbilical cords – and found the percentage had increased to 33. That’s one in three babies born in that hospital.
The national average is 4 percent.
Good Lord. Substance abuse already is a social and law enforcement crisis in West Virginia. Clearly, it is having an adverse effect on our economy.
Let’s be frank: Our state already suffers from unflattering stereotypes. Add to that a reputation as a state full of addicts, and what corporate executive in his right mind would locate a plant or store here?
We don’t have the money – or the time – to waste on anti-drug fads or politically correct approaches to the problem. West Virginians need to find ways to take a massive bite out of substance abuse immediately.
Eat Dinner with your Children Tonight
source: wwwhaddonfield.patch.com
The National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse at Columbia University initiated the Family Day movement in 2001 to make parents aware that frequent family meals can help keep America’s kids substance free.
Their motto is “Dinner Makes A Difference.” Research by the National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse (CASA Columbia) at Columbia University has consistently found “the more often kids eat dinner with their families, the less likely they are to smoke, drink or use drugs.”
Who knew something as simple as eating dinner together could have such a huge impact on our children?
I personally enjoy family dinners, except for the cleaning up part. It’s the perfect time of day to catch up and talk. According to CASA Columbia, talking is the secret to keeping kids away from drugs.
The type of conversation and family time that occurs at the dinner table really does “make a difference.” You don’t have to talk about the big issues; the simple act of engaging one another is what influences our children to become responsible adults.
Some of my most favorite childhood memories are of family dinners. I remember laughing a lot but I also remember having serious conversations about life. I felt a sense of belonging and comfort at the dinner table and I’m guessing that is what helps to keep kids on the right track. If they don’t feel like they fit in at home, they may try and find that feeling somewhere else.
Studies have also linked family dinners to better grades, higher self esteem, less depression, and healthier diets for kids. It has also been suggested that family dinners often create happier marriages which in turn make happier families.
Don’t forget, manners and respect are also taught at the dinner table and that is priceless in today’s world. I read somewhere, and I cannot remember where, that family dinners teach children how to be civilized members of society. Maybe there wouldn’t be as much bullying and disrespect for authority and property if children shared meals with parents or guardians on a regular basis?
So, tonight, have dinner together and enjoy each other’s company. Turn off the TV, ban the cell phones and iPods, and sit, eat and talk. I know it’s hard to find the time but it is well worth the effort.
What happens at the dinner table stays with you the rest of your life.
A presidential proclamation states that the fourth Monday in September is Family Day—A Day to Eat Dinner with your Children. President Obama wants you to eat dinner with your family tonight.
Don’t let him down.
Drug Use, HIV/AIDS, Alcohol Abuse on the Rise Amongst Youngsters
Gautham Ashok, The Tibet Post International
Dharamshala: The Tibet Post International is in conversation with Mr. Tenzin Legphel from Kunphen, the first and only Tibetan run non-governmental organization (NGO) that provides programs focusing on treatment and care for alcohol and drug abusers. The centre also provides assistance to HIV/AIDS victims as well as developing human resources by promoting education and carrying out awareness campaigns in communities.
Soft spoken, yet eloquent, Legphel did his schooling from upper TCV in Dharamshala, and went on to earn his Bachelor’s degree from Punjab University in Chandigarh. For the past six years, he has worked at Kunphen , with the last two years in a directorial capacity.
Legphel says that he first came to Kunphen as a volunteer, and later joined the organisation because of a close personal reason: “My cousin had died earlier of a drug overdose, and due to this I became more involved in Kunphen and its activities.” Read more
Kunphen assisted TCV health club to organize their world drugs abuse day program in Upper TCV School
Upper TCV school’s health club is assisted by Kunphen centre for substance dependence has organize world drug abuse day in Upper TCV School. The program begins with morning assemble presentation by members of health club on substance. The presentation last for twenty four minutes and it covered almost all the aspect of substance but more importance is given on smoking and chewing tobacco. After the morning we have initiate our I PLEDGE SIGNING EVENT with school head master and he wrote I SAY NO TO TOBACCO, DRUGS AND ALCOHOL.
KUNPHEN MARKS INTERNATIONAL DAY AGAINST SUBSTANCE ABUSE & ILLICT TRAFFICKING
Kunphen centre for substance dependence and HIV has marked INTERNATIONAL DAY AGAINST SUBSTANCE ABUSE & ILLICT TRAFFICKING with Dept of health (CTA). The main aim to the day is to bring awareness on Tibetan people about this social virus and giving them an opportunity to think over this issue.
We have set up three I pledge signing boot: one at main square McLeod Ganj, another at the entrance of Dalai Lama temple and gotoe Ramoche monastery where there were celebrating the Birthday of H.H the karmapa. Beside signature event, we have posters, stickers, key tag and pamphlets to be distributed during the event. The respond to our event was overwhelming. Read more
HIV/AIDS AND SUBSTANCE DEPENDENCE awareness AT TIBETAN SETTLEMENTS IN NORTH EAST INDIA
at the beginning of this year Department of health (CTA) has request Kunphen to help them on their project on HIV/AIDS and substance dependence awareness in Tibetan settlement in north east India. We are very glad about that opportunity and accept it with great humility. We have arranged a client to speak about his life story and a prepared him to talk to the audience. There are to visit four towns which have more than 150 Tibetan families and four Tibetan settlements. At the beginning of March our staff Mr. Tenzin woaber and our client Mr. Pema Gyalpo has left for the project along with a staff from Department Of Health.
Darjeeling (11th March 2010):- Their first stop was in Darjeeling which is located in West Bengal State of India. Darjeeling it’s known for its Tea and Tourism, Tibetans has been settling in that town every since we have lost our country. There were more than Two hundred Tibetan families and the main occupation of the Tibetans is cloth business. There is a Tibetan school administrated by CTSA (Under Department of human resource, Indian government). This school has more than 700 students and class up to higher secondary level.
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