Stories Ending Stigma

Real recovery stories breaking addiction stigma

Knowledge Center

Human Resources

Empowering healthy workplaces

Newsletter

Updates and news about our initiatives

Webinar

Educational sessions on opioid issues

Education

Research

Opioid crisis impact data

u

FAQs

Common questions and answers

Did you Know

Did You Know

September 2024

In last month’s Link Lunch and Learn webinar, Dr. Richard Meich, Principal Investigator of “Monitoring The Future” shared his findings. If you don’t know, “Monitoring The Future” is the annual report on how today’s youth are interacting with drug use. “Monitoring the Future” is one of only two studies that the FDA considers of sufficient quality to inform its policy decisions on youth drug use.

Dr. Meich was generous enough to share his slide presentation with Live Tampa Bay’s coalition members.

What remains impressive, and was talked about – as the number of overdose fatalities is on a sharp rise – is that actual drug use amongst teens has significantly decreased. What this means is that the drugs that are out there are significantly worse and more deadly than ever before.

Check out his report below, and you can learn more at: www.monitoringthefuture.org

Related Posts

Women Shaping the Recovery Movement

If addiction were only about the substance, everyone exposed to the same drug would have the same outcome. We know that’s not how it works. One famous series of experiments, often called “Rat Park”, offers a surprisingly human lesson: our environment and our sense of belonging can dramatically shape how we relate to substances.

Letter from the CEO

This February, I’ve been thinking a lot about how loneliness, overdose, and stigma show up in real lives here in Tampa Bay, and what it would look like for all of us to respond with more compassion, not more pressure. In my letter, I share why connection and person‑first language matter so much, how Black communities are carrying a disproportionate share of this crisis, and three simple ways we can care for ourselves more kindly while helping someone else feel less alone.