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March
21, 2001
Contacts:
Shiyoko Cothren, (313) 577-7917, scothren@med.wayne.edu
Andrea Gresko, (313) 577-1872, agresko@med.wayne.edu
WSU, University
Psychiatric Centers offer screenings for alcohol problems: National Alcohol Screening Day is April 5
Have you or someone
you know ever blacked out after a night of drinking, had a drink to calm your
nerves or to forget your worries, tried to cut back on your drinking but
realized you couldn’t? If so, you
could be one of the nearly 14 million Americans that have an alcohol problem.
Wayne State
University and University Psychiatric Centers (UPC)
are offering free, anonymous screenings for alcohol problems as part of
National Alcohol Screening Day, Thursday, April 5. The free screenings will be held at the Wayne State University main campus Student
Center from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. and at UPC-Livonia, 16836 Newburgh Road,
from 2 p.m. to 5 p.m.
National Alcohol
Screening Day (NASD), held in April as part of Alcohol Awareness Month, is a
program of the nonprofit Screening for Mental Health in collaboration with the
National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA), the Center for
Substance Abuse Treatment (CSAT) and the Center for Substance Abuse Prevention (CSAP).
Screenings will be held across the country at approximately 2,000
screening sites, including hospitals, alcohol and addiction treatment centers,
and colleges.
Participants at Wayne
State University and UPC-Livonia will receive educational materials on alcohol
problems, complete a written self-test, and have the opportunity to talk
privately with a health professional. An
educational video, pamphlets, brochures and flyers will be available, as well as
referrals to local treatment and support resources for those who need further
evaluation.
NASD is aimed at the
general community and all are invited to attend.
Building on the success of last year’s program, NASD 2001 is once again
focusing on teaching participants how to recognize if they or a loved one is
abusing alcohol and how to get the help they need.
Signs that they or a
friend or loved one may have an alcohol problem:
* Drinking to calm nerves, forget worries or boost a sad mood
* Guilt about drinking
* Unsuccessful attempts to cut down/stop drinking
* Lying about or hiding drinking habits
* Causing harm to oneself or someone else as a result of drinking
* Needing to drink increasingly greater amounts in order to achieve desired
effect
* Feeling irritable, resentful or unreasonable when not drinking
* Medical, social, family, or financial problems caused by drinking
Sponsors of NASD
include the American Academy of Addiction Psychiatry, American Academy of
Physician Assistants, American Council on Alcoholism, American Medical
Association, American Osteopathic Association, American Psychiatric Association,
American Psychological Association, American Society of Addiction Medicine,
College Parents of America, Community Anti-Drug Coalitions of America, Higher
Education Center for Alcohol and Other Drug Prevention, Join Together, Mothers
Against Drunk Driving, National Association of Alcoholism and Drug Abuse
Counselors, National Association for Children of Alcoholics, National
Association of Psychiatric Health System, National Center for Farmworker Health,
National Collegiate Athletic Association, National Council on Alcoholism and
Drug Dependence, National Interfraternity Conference, National Mental Health
Association, National Organization on Fetal Alcohol Syndrome, and the National
Panhellenic Conference
The program is the
result of a collaboration between the nonprofit Screening for Mental Health,
Inc., the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA), the Center
for Substance Abuse Treatment (CSAT), and the Center for Substance Abuse
Prevention (CSAP).
For additional
information about alcohol or the screening program, visit www.mentalhealthscreening.org.
For more information
on substance abuse or to talk to a clinician or researcher regarding this
subject, please call (313) 577-7917.
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