
Barbara Hilliard, Coordinator
Laurie Ford, Co-Chairperson
Eileen Keenan, Co-Chairperson
Ruth Patras, Secretary
Susan Suras, Treasurer
P.O. Box 410
Holmdel, New Jersey 07733-0410
732-946-4330
What The Alliance Is All About...
The
Holmdel Alliance to Prevent Alcoholism & Drug Abuse is an organization composed
of members of the community, including teachers, parents,
administrators, and the Holmdel Township Police. Through
education, workshops, lectures, and sponsorships of drug and
alcohol free youth programs, the organization focuses on drug,
alcohol, and violence prevention in Holmdel Township. The
Alliance includes the Village, Indian Hill, William R. Satz
and High Schools and the non-public schools, St. Benedict's
and St. John Vianney.
How To Join The Alliance
The Alliance meets every third Tuesday of the month at the Holmdel
High School Library at 1 p.m. Anyone wishing to join can come
to the meeting (see meeting dates listed below).
The next dates for Alliance
meetings at 1 P.M. Holmdel H.S.
Library are Oct 17, Nov
21, Jan 16, Feb 20, March 20, April 17, May 15, June 12. For further information regarding
the Alliance, contact Barbara Hilliard at (732) 946-4330 ext.
1214 or
e-mail at BHilliard51@comcast.net.
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Links to Information & Articles |
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Local and National Help |
Student Assistance
Counselor H.S. & W.R. Satz Schools
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732-946-1825 |
Carrier/Bayshore Counseling Center
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732-739-0084 |
Monmouth Medical Center, Mental
Health Services
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732-923-6500 |
Community YMCA- Family Services
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732-290-9040 |
CPC Behavioral Health Care
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732-842-2000 |
Mental Health Association of Monmouth
County
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732-542-6422 |
United Way, First Call For Help
For All Social Services Agencies
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732-938-5988 |
Women's Center of Monmouth County
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732-946-4111 |
Holmdel Police Department
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732-946-4400 |
National
Clearinghouse on Alcohol and Drug Information
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1-800-729-6686 |
National
Council on Alcoholism and Drug Dependence, Inc.
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212-206-6770 |
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Alliance Events |
Holmdel Drug and Alcohol Alliance 2005/06 Accomplishments
Information Alert on Stackers,
DMX: Coricidin & Robitussin Abuse and Ephedrine
- STACKERS are legal; over the counter dietary supplements
used to assist in weight loss and muscle enhancement. These
supplements can be extremely dangerous to your teenager’s
health. They are available at local drug and vitamin stores
and gas stations. Ephedrine, the main ingredient, is a
natural herb and therefore not currently regulated by the
FDA. The FDA is now considering regulation, as a result of
many young, health-conscious people suffering from strokes,
heart conditions, and other serious illnesses related to
stacker use. It has also been linked to anxiety,
sleeplessness, migraines, high blood pressure, and seizures
and in some instances ephedra has been linked with death.
- DMX: CORICIDIN & ROBITUSSIN ABUSE - Teens are abusing
over-the-counter cold pills to get high The latest craze
among teens is using over-the-counter cold medicines and
cough syrup in excessive doses as recreational drugs –
deliberately ingesting large amounts of Coricidin HBP-Cough
& Cold Pills or Robitussin – as many as 15 tablets at once.
The ingredient is DXM or dextromethorphan: a legal cough
medicine ingredient which is uncontrolled by the government
and is available in over 125 different products. These
medicines can be purchased off the drugstore or supermarket
counter. When used correctly, DXM suppresses coughs safely,
but in large amounts it produces a chemical imbalance in the
brain that allows the kids to get high. The DEA says abusers
report an LSD-like high: a heightened sense of perceptual
awareness, altered time perception and visual
hallucinations. The effects are respiratory distress,
involuntary rapid eye movement, increased pupil size,
unsteady gait, hallucinations, confusion, slurred speech,
nausea and vomiting. Teens use terms such as dexing,
robotripping, red devils, triple-C’s or skittles (the red
pills, resemble candy & bear three C’s). There have been
many reported cases of overdoses and at least 5 deaths
nationwide. Lookout for excessive packages of cold medicine
lying around.
- EPHEDRINE The FDA has banned the sale of any supplements containing
ephedrine alkaloids (ephedra) throughout the US effective
immediately. Ephedra, also called ma haung, is a naturally
occurring substance derived from plants. Its principal
active ingredient ephedrine acts as a stimulant and mimics
the effects of an amphetamine (speed). It is extremely
dangerous and has been linked to adverse health effects,
including heart attack and stroke. In recent years ephedra
products have been promoted to aid weight loss, enhance
sports performance and increase energy. For further
information: Web site http://www.fda.gov/oc/initiatives/ephedra/february2004/
Student Youth Alliances
- The Satz Youth Alliance for grades 7-8 and the Holmdel
High School Youth Alliance for grades 9-12 participate in
activities that demonstrate one can have fun without drugs
and alcohol. Club members participate in fund-raisers, Red
Ribbon week, and an annual food drive and community service
projects that promote the Alliance’s no-use message. Past
trips included the NJ Devils, Lakewood Blueclaws and NJ
Nets. To join a Youth Alliance at Satz School contact Mr.
James Bruce, Guidance Counselor and at Holmdel High School
contact Kathy Moran-Kudisch, Student Assistance Counselor,
946-1825.
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