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The purpose of this article is to describe an interprofessional, evidence-based, nurse-led, substance use prevention program implemented in local and surrounding county school settings by university nursing and other health science students and to explore these students' perceptions of their training and implementation of the program. This program was developed from a community assessment revealing the rise of adolescent substance use and the need for ongoing substance use prevention. This program's journey encompasses a 4-year period with feedback from students in four university departments (nursing, psychological and brain sciences, public health, and social work) who learned and implemented the Say It Straight program targeting elementary and middle school-aged children. This program was taught over six weeks, with 45-minute lessons per week. Feedback collected over the period of the program reveals what is felt to be the most useful parts of the training, as well as the strengths and weaknesses of the model implementation. School nurses are child advocates and often serve as leaders in developing health policies and programs in the school setting. This nurse-led, interprofessional, health promotion project can be viewed as a model for school nurses in establishing university partnerships to address community health needs.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1942602X211067225 | DOI Listing |
J Addict Nurs
September 2025
Irma Alvarado, PhD, MSN, RN, HACP, Hoang Nguyen, PhD, and Cindy West, DNP, APRN, CRNA, School of Nursing, UTMB Health, Galveston, Texas.
Introduction: Health professionals may be susceptible to misusing alcohol due to stress and burnout. This is especially true in states with high alcohol consumption. Health care organizations can implement evidence-based policies, programs, and solutions that identify, address, and help prevent adverse outcomes and burnout for health workers.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Addict Nurs
September 2025
Cecilie W. Toudahl, MSc, The College of Nursing, University of South Carolina, Columbia, South Carolina.a.
Substance misuse among college students continues to rise, with polysubstance use becoming increasingly common. Alcohol remains the most prevalent substance, with heavy episodic and high-quantity drinking linked to serious consequences, including injuries, assaults, and deaths. Concurrent use of alcohol and cannabis, as well as other illicit drugs, further compounds risks to health, safety, and academic functioning.
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August 2025
Brandy Mechling, PhD, RN, PMHCNS-BC, FNAP, University of North Carolina Wilmington, Wilmington, NC.
In the United States, approximately 20 million individuals, age 12 and older, have a substance use disorder (SUD), with an average age of first-time use at 13 years old. Evidence has shown that many SUDs begin in adolescence, and involvement with the legal system can ensue. Adolescents with first-time drug and alcohol arrests can be referred to an Adolescent Intervention Program (AIP) as an alternative to jailtime from the juvenile court system.
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September 2025
Kennedy Krieger Institute, Baltimore, Maryland.
Objective: To identify correlates of deliberate self-harm (DSH) in youth with autism and/or intellectual disability (ID).
Method: This retrospective longitudinal cohort analysis used claims data for youth ages 5 to 24 years continuously enrolled in Medicaid in a midwestern state for 6 months and diagnosed with autism and/or ID between 2010 and 2020 (N = 41,230). Cox proportional hazards regression examined associations between demographic and clinical variables and time to DSH for study cohorts with autism and/or ID.