A Mystery Story
By Andrew Malekoff © 2011
A few weeks ago, in an attempt to fight off a cold, I ordered a bowl of chicken soup at a local lunch counter. One of the counter boys who is in his late teens asked me if I heard that the United States was just declared a war-zone by the US Senate. I said, “What are you talking about?”
He filled me in. But what he told me didn’t fully compute. What he said, in a nutshell, was that the US Senate passed a bill that would empower the US Military to arrest American citizens and detain them anywhere in the world without being charged or without a trial. I didn’t want to be dismissive. I questioned myself, “Why didn’t I hear about this in the mainstream media?”
I asked him where he heard this. He told me that he read about it on the Internet. When I got home I searched the Internet. What I found was some alternative-media commentary and the actual text of a recent bill (the National Defense Authorization Act - S 1867).
On the evening of December 2, 2011 the US Senate voted, by an overwhelming majority of 93 – 7, to approve what some commentators described as the darkest piece of legislation ever passed in America. Both New York Senators voted “yes.”
After reading the commentary about S 1867 I wondered, “Is there a real threat to our rights, or is this a radical spin?” If I was having trouble making sense of it I imagined others would as well.
The key issues in question are sections 1031 and 1032, which allow the President to authorize the U.S. Armed Forces to detain and hold in custody a person who was a member or part of al Qaeda or “an associated force” and participated in planning or carrying out an attack or attempted attack against the United States or its coalition partners.
I wondered what the fuss was all about. Someone, in a man-on-the-street interview that I found on YouTube, said of the legislation, “If you’re not doing anything wrong, then you have nothing to worry about.” Or, is the devil is in the details. For example, what does “member of an associated force” mean? Could it be stretched to mean anyone with a dissenting voice who government officials perceive as a threat? Could it be someone close to you who is exercising freedom of speech or association?
The interpretations of the commentators were that the legislation would authorize the US military to operate on American soil and to arrest and detain American citizens with no charge, no trial and no oversight. They concluded that by dismissing the right to due process this legislation, if fully enacted, leaves American citizens without the protections of the Constitution and invalidates the Bill of Rights. If signed into law, they reasoned, it could mean secret arrests, no due process, and no right to remain silent and to be tried by a jury of one’s peers, secret prisons, unlawful interrogation and indefinite detention without being charged with a crime.
Ninety-three out of 100 US senators signed on to this legislation. What am I missing? I couldn’t find anything substantial in the mainstream media about this. What should I say to my young friend next time I see him at the lunch counter? Does he have a right to be worried? Do we?
This “exercise” brought to my attention just how difficult it is for young people (and us older ones too) to synthesize the glut of information that is available today. The least we can do is to listen and be co-investigators with young people, attempting together to sort out the mysteries that besiege us in this information-age.
This column will appear in the Anton chain of 18 Long Island, New York newspapers in December 2011.
Friday, December 9, 2011
Wednesday, December 7, 2011
"GET SPIKED"
“Get Spiked”
Andrew Malekoff © 2011
In the five-year period from 2005 to 2009 there was a dramatic increase in emergency room visits related to non-alcoholic energy drinks, according to a report issued on November 22, 2011 by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA). Just about half of those emergency-room visits were made by 18- to 25-year-olds who were found to be using alcohol, illicit drugs or pharmaceuticals.
What are energy drinks? They are highly-caffeinated flavored beverages for sale in cans and bottles in grocery stores and vending machines. Children, adolescents and young adults - half of the energy-drink market - are the primary targets of energy-drink marketing.
One popular energy drink – Red Bull – bills its beverage as “developed for people who want to have a clear and focused mind, perform physically, are dynamic and performance-oriented.”
Another popular drink, ROCKSTAR, targets young skateboarders. Here is their rap: “Bigger. Better. Faster. Stronger. ROCKSTAR is the world's most powerful energy drink. Enhanced with the potent herbal blend of Guarana, Ginkgo, Ginseng and Milk Thistle, ROCKSTAR is scientifically formulated to provide an incredible energy boost for those who lead active and exhausting lifestyles – from athletes to rock stars.” Although they highlight the “herbal blend,” they conveniently leave out the 80 milligrams of caffeine listed in ROCKSTAR’s ingredients.
These are just two illustrations of seductive messages, aimed at young people and promising a quick-fix for improving performance. Parents, teachers, coaches and others who care about kids need to educate them to the fact that energy drinks are not the answer to better performance on the athletic field or in the classroom.
There are numerous studies that point to the medical risks of excessive caffeine intake (for example, arrhythmias, hypertension, dehydration and more serious medical conditions). When mixed with alcohol and other drugs, the level of danger increases dramatically.
The term “energy drink” is a misnomer for a product that should be more accurately labeled as a “stimulant drug-containing drink.” Some people believe that criticism about energy drinks is an overreaction - much ado about nothing. After all, as they might say, if the active ingredient in energy drinks – caffeine – is the same substance contained in coffee, what’s the big deal? No one is making a fuss about coffee or trying to get it banned or controlled.
Coffee tends to be viewed as an adult beverage, while energy drinks are aimed at the youth market with little regard for health risks and the consequences of mixing these beverages with alcohol and other drugs.
“Get spiked,” “Party like a rockstar,” and “Feel the freak” are slogans that clearly demonstrate the marketing strategies of energy-drink companies. “The language and images of such advertising are not directed at mature adults. If anything, the marketing of energy drinks removes all ambiguity about whom these products are meant to appeal to: teens and young adults,” according to Russ Paddock of the United States Sports Academy.
Parents, teachers and coaches need to educate young people about the risks to their health and well-being of using energy drinks as an easy alternative to exercise, sleep and a healthy diet – the “keys to quality performance, sustained success and overall wellness,” according to Pamela S. Hyde of SAMHSA.
The full report on Emergency Department Visits Involving Energy Drinks from SAMHSA's 2005 - 2009 Drug Abuse Warning Network (DAWN) can be found on the Internet at: http://www.samhsa.gov/data/2k11/WEB_DAWN_089/WEB_DAWN_089_HTML.pdf
This article will be published in the Anton chain of 18 Long Island, NY newspapers in January 2012.
Andrew Malekoff © 2011
In the five-year period from 2005 to 2009 there was a dramatic increase in emergency room visits related to non-alcoholic energy drinks, according to a report issued on November 22, 2011 by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA). Just about half of those emergency-room visits were made by 18- to 25-year-olds who were found to be using alcohol, illicit drugs or pharmaceuticals.
What are energy drinks? They are highly-caffeinated flavored beverages for sale in cans and bottles in grocery stores and vending machines. Children, adolescents and young adults - half of the energy-drink market - are the primary targets of energy-drink marketing.
One popular energy drink – Red Bull – bills its beverage as “developed for people who want to have a clear and focused mind, perform physically, are dynamic and performance-oriented.”
Another popular drink, ROCKSTAR, targets young skateboarders. Here is their rap: “Bigger. Better. Faster. Stronger. ROCKSTAR is the world's most powerful energy drink. Enhanced with the potent herbal blend of Guarana, Ginkgo, Ginseng and Milk Thistle, ROCKSTAR is scientifically formulated to provide an incredible energy boost for those who lead active and exhausting lifestyles – from athletes to rock stars.” Although they highlight the “herbal blend,” they conveniently leave out the 80 milligrams of caffeine listed in ROCKSTAR’s ingredients.
These are just two illustrations of seductive messages, aimed at young people and promising a quick-fix for improving performance. Parents, teachers, coaches and others who care about kids need to educate them to the fact that energy drinks are not the answer to better performance on the athletic field or in the classroom.
There are numerous studies that point to the medical risks of excessive caffeine intake (for example, arrhythmias, hypertension, dehydration and more serious medical conditions). When mixed with alcohol and other drugs, the level of danger increases dramatically.
The term “energy drink” is a misnomer for a product that should be more accurately labeled as a “stimulant drug-containing drink.” Some people believe that criticism about energy drinks is an overreaction - much ado about nothing. After all, as they might say, if the active ingredient in energy drinks – caffeine – is the same substance contained in coffee, what’s the big deal? No one is making a fuss about coffee or trying to get it banned or controlled.
Coffee tends to be viewed as an adult beverage, while energy drinks are aimed at the youth market with little regard for health risks and the consequences of mixing these beverages with alcohol and other drugs.
“Get spiked,” “Party like a rockstar,” and “Feel the freak” are slogans that clearly demonstrate the marketing strategies of energy-drink companies. “The language and images of such advertising are not directed at mature adults. If anything, the marketing of energy drinks removes all ambiguity about whom these products are meant to appeal to: teens and young adults,” according to Russ Paddock of the United States Sports Academy.
Parents, teachers and coaches need to educate young people about the risks to their health and well-being of using energy drinks as an easy alternative to exercise, sleep and a healthy diet – the “keys to quality performance, sustained success and overall wellness,” according to Pamela S. Hyde of SAMHSA.
The full report on Emergency Department Visits Involving Energy Drinks from SAMHSA's 2005 - 2009 Drug Abuse Warning Network (DAWN) can be found on the Internet at: http://www.samhsa.gov/data/2k11/WEB_DAWN_089/WEB_DAWN_089_HTML.pdf
This article will be published in the Anton chain of 18 Long Island, NY newspapers in January 2012.
Labels:
adolescents,
alcohol,
behavioral healthcare,
childrens,
drugs,
emergency room,
energy drinks,
youths
EXPRESSWAY: YOUNG PEOPLE NEED CONNECTIONS
Expressway: Young people need connections
published in NEWSDAY on November 17, 2011
by Andrew Malekoff ©
There are times that I feel as if I am being buried alive, one tablespoon of tabloid dirt at a time. To name names here would be redundant. Besides, they all blur together in blaring headlines like the latest scandal, complements of Happy Valley, Pennsylvania.
I wonder what young people think of the endless parade of public figures – government officials, businessmen, entertainers, professional athletes, college coaches and administrators - crashing and burning before their eyes. Perhaps F. Scott Fitgerald said it best when he wrote: “Show me a hero and I will write you a tragedy.”
A few years ago in a survey conducted by North Shore Child and Family Guidance Center, we asked 1200 high school students from all across Long Island to tell us their concerns now and for the future.
One of them wrote: “I don’t think this world is ever going to get better. To live in this world you have to be very very strong, because if you’re not, the system will walk all over you…you really cannot trust anybody but your family, and not even them half the time.”
Relationships, illness, divorce and death weighed heavily on their minds. One wrote about the dissolution of his parents’ marriage, “My parents are getting a divorce and now there is talk about my mother being forced to move out of the house and my father move in and I have no say. I have lost faith in the court system. I thought we had the right to freedom of speech, but I guess actually being heard is another story.”
Another talked about his fears: “I am afraid of a lot of things; mainly dying too young and not getting to live to my greatest expectations.”
We asked, “When you’re confused about life who helps you sort things out?” Almost three-quarters said their parents, and their friends fill that role. Far from rejecting parents in favor of peers, family is part of the solution, not the problem.
In an all-day gathering of teens and adults that followed the release of the survey results, the young people talked about well-meaning parents who are overwhelmed with trying to make ends meet, with little or no time for substantive discussion with them; and they talked about teachers who they admire but who are too preoccupied with preparations for standardized testing.
In one small group discussion that day a parent commented: “What stood out for me the most was the observation by several of the kids that they need support from adults to tackle the challenging issues they face. Often, adults complain that kids are apathetic, lazy, unmotivated or apolitical. Maybe it is our own apathy and fears that prevent us as adults from helping.”
And, a teacher said: “Listening to the depths of emotion and world concerns from the students, I came away feeling that we are missing the boat with our kids. I know this is a generalization but, so many young people are walking around with such powerful feelings that we as adults are not helping them with. Our schools appear to be more interested in control, assessments and achievement scores than the life events that affect our children.”
As I reflect on the voices of young people living all across Long Island I am reminded a simple truth – connections count. It is the good connections in their lives that enable our children to bounce back from private crises such as illness, divorce, drug addiction, child abuse and death; and to keep them from being weighed down by the daily drumbeat and demoralizing impact of public scandal and corruption that beset us.
Andrew Malekoff is executive director and chief executive of North Shore Child and Family Guidance Center.
published in NEWSDAY on November 17, 2011
by Andrew Malekoff ©
There are times that I feel as if I am being buried alive, one tablespoon of tabloid dirt at a time. To name names here would be redundant. Besides, they all blur together in blaring headlines like the latest scandal, complements of Happy Valley, Pennsylvania.
I wonder what young people think of the endless parade of public figures – government officials, businessmen, entertainers, professional athletes, college coaches and administrators - crashing and burning before their eyes. Perhaps F. Scott Fitgerald said it best when he wrote: “Show me a hero and I will write you a tragedy.”
A few years ago in a survey conducted by North Shore Child and Family Guidance Center, we asked 1200 high school students from all across Long Island to tell us their concerns now and for the future.
One of them wrote: “I don’t think this world is ever going to get better. To live in this world you have to be very very strong, because if you’re not, the system will walk all over you…you really cannot trust anybody but your family, and not even them half the time.”
Relationships, illness, divorce and death weighed heavily on their minds. One wrote about the dissolution of his parents’ marriage, “My parents are getting a divorce and now there is talk about my mother being forced to move out of the house and my father move in and I have no say. I have lost faith in the court system. I thought we had the right to freedom of speech, but I guess actually being heard is another story.”
Another talked about his fears: “I am afraid of a lot of things; mainly dying too young and not getting to live to my greatest expectations.”
We asked, “When you’re confused about life who helps you sort things out?” Almost three-quarters said their parents, and their friends fill that role. Far from rejecting parents in favor of peers, family is part of the solution, not the problem.
In an all-day gathering of teens and adults that followed the release of the survey results, the young people talked about well-meaning parents who are overwhelmed with trying to make ends meet, with little or no time for substantive discussion with them; and they talked about teachers who they admire but who are too preoccupied with preparations for standardized testing.
In one small group discussion that day a parent commented: “What stood out for me the most was the observation by several of the kids that they need support from adults to tackle the challenging issues they face. Often, adults complain that kids are apathetic, lazy, unmotivated or apolitical. Maybe it is our own apathy and fears that prevent us as adults from helping.”
And, a teacher said: “Listening to the depths of emotion and world concerns from the students, I came away feeling that we are missing the boat with our kids. I know this is a generalization but, so many young people are walking around with such powerful feelings that we as adults are not helping them with. Our schools appear to be more interested in control, assessments and achievement scores than the life events that affect our children.”
As I reflect on the voices of young people living all across Long Island I am reminded a simple truth – connections count. It is the good connections in their lives that enable our children to bounce back from private crises such as illness, divorce, drug addiction, child abuse and death; and to keep them from being weighed down by the daily drumbeat and demoralizing impact of public scandal and corruption that beset us.
Andrew Malekoff is executive director and chief executive of North Shore Child and Family Guidance Center.
Labels:
adolescents,
connections,
elementary school,
Penn State scandal,
youths
THE CHILDREN'S PLAN
The Children’s Plan
by Andrew Malekoff ©
New York State launched an initiative known as The Children’s Plan that focused on the promotion of mental health and the treatment of children with emotional disturbance. I was pleased to serve on the statewide workgroup that was engaged in the development of the Children’s Plan.
To understand the need that was addressed, let us take a look at the American reality:
• 1 out of 10 children has a serious emotional disturbance;
• More children suffer from psychiatric illness than from autism, leukemia, diabetes and AIDS combined;
• Only 1 out of 5 children who have emotional disturbance receive help from a mental health specialist;
• Emotional disturbance is associated with the highest rate of school dropout among all disability groups;
• Only 30% of children age 14 and older with emotional disturbance graduate with a standard high school diploma and
• Suicide is the third leading cause of death for 15- to 24-year-olds.
At North Shore Child and Family Guidance Center, where our mission is to restore and strengthen the emotional well-being of children and families, these statistics are brought to life daily. We are fielding an unprecedented number of emergency calls regarding young people who are so anxious or depressed that they feel that life is no longer worth living. Some live in homes that are like war zones where the rules for survival are: don’t talk, don’t trust and don’t feel. Some are so isolated and lonely that they feel invisible. Others are targets of bias and bullying and suffer in silence.
I will never forget the 12-year-old boy who attended one of our school-based mental health programs - the Intensive Support Program (ISP), a joint venture with the Nassau Board of Cooperative Educational Services. He was a transfer student from a district school where he struggled to learn and was a target of bullying. Upon his return home from ISP, one afternoon, he told his mom, “Mommy, for the first time in my life I feel like a normal kid.” His mother recalled the story to us in tears of relief. One simple sentence, “Mommy, for the first time in my life I feel like a normal kid,” and a lifetime of potential unlocked.
Community-based mental health agencies offer children opportunities to feel competent, fit in with others, stand tall and have a voice. But we cannot do it alone. Early intervention and partnerships with key stakeholders such as pediatricians and teachers are critical.
According to renowned psychiatrist Harold Koplowicz who heads up the Child Mind Institute in New York City, “The sooner we get these kids help, the sooner they can get back to being kids, and growing into happy, successful adults.” He calls for pediatricians and teachers to be better trained in identifying the signs and symptoms of emotional disorders and empowered to notify parents when a child’s behavior falls outside a typical range. His sentiments are reinforced by the key findings and recommendations of the Children’s Plan.
We can no longer afford to operate in “silos” of care that are barriers to integrating and coordinating mental health care for our children. By working together to nurture all children’s potential we give them the boost that they need to have the best chance for a successful future.
Originally published in the Anton chain of 18 Long Island, NY newspapers in November 2011.
by Andrew Malekoff ©
New York State launched an initiative known as The Children’s Plan that focused on the promotion of mental health and the treatment of children with emotional disturbance. I was pleased to serve on the statewide workgroup that was engaged in the development of the Children’s Plan.
To understand the need that was addressed, let us take a look at the American reality:
• 1 out of 10 children has a serious emotional disturbance;
• More children suffer from psychiatric illness than from autism, leukemia, diabetes and AIDS combined;
• Only 1 out of 5 children who have emotional disturbance receive help from a mental health specialist;
• Emotional disturbance is associated with the highest rate of school dropout among all disability groups;
• Only 30% of children age 14 and older with emotional disturbance graduate with a standard high school diploma and
• Suicide is the third leading cause of death for 15- to 24-year-olds.
At North Shore Child and Family Guidance Center, where our mission is to restore and strengthen the emotional well-being of children and families, these statistics are brought to life daily. We are fielding an unprecedented number of emergency calls regarding young people who are so anxious or depressed that they feel that life is no longer worth living. Some live in homes that are like war zones where the rules for survival are: don’t talk, don’t trust and don’t feel. Some are so isolated and lonely that they feel invisible. Others are targets of bias and bullying and suffer in silence.
I will never forget the 12-year-old boy who attended one of our school-based mental health programs - the Intensive Support Program (ISP), a joint venture with the Nassau Board of Cooperative Educational Services. He was a transfer student from a district school where he struggled to learn and was a target of bullying. Upon his return home from ISP, one afternoon, he told his mom, “Mommy, for the first time in my life I feel like a normal kid.” His mother recalled the story to us in tears of relief. One simple sentence, “Mommy, for the first time in my life I feel like a normal kid,” and a lifetime of potential unlocked.
Community-based mental health agencies offer children opportunities to feel competent, fit in with others, stand tall and have a voice. But we cannot do it alone. Early intervention and partnerships with key stakeholders such as pediatricians and teachers are critical.
According to renowned psychiatrist Harold Koplowicz who heads up the Child Mind Institute in New York City, “The sooner we get these kids help, the sooner they can get back to being kids, and growing into happy, successful adults.” He calls for pediatricians and teachers to be better trained in identifying the signs and symptoms of emotional disorders and empowered to notify parents when a child’s behavior falls outside a typical range. His sentiments are reinforced by the key findings and recommendations of the Children’s Plan.
We can no longer afford to operate in “silos” of care that are barriers to integrating and coordinating mental health care for our children. By working together to nurture all children’s potential we give them the boost that they need to have the best chance for a successful future.
Originally published in the Anton chain of 18 Long Island, NY newspapers in November 2011.
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