Tag: New York

  • Real Housewife Luann de Lesseps Takes Sobriety "Day by Day"

    Real Housewife Luann de Lesseps Takes Sobriety "Day by Day"

    The ‘Real Housewives of New York’ star says her co-stars support her on her sober journey.

    Countess Luann de Lesseps, who stars on the Real Housewives of New York, told Life & Style that she’s received immense support from her co-stars in her sober journey.

    “You know what, I take it day by day,” de Lesseps said. “I take my sobriety seriously, and day by day, and I just am learning to enjoy myself without drinking. So it’s eye-opening and it’s not easy. It’s always a struggle, but I feel a lot better.”

    The reality star may have realized she had a problem with alcohol when she was charged with several crimes following a Christmas Eve arrest, including battery of an officer, disorderly intoxication, resisting arrest with violence, and crimes against a person, and two corruption by threat charges for telling officers, “I am going to kill you all.”

    Her hefty list of charges could have landed her five years in prison, according to TMZ. She even rejected a plea deal offered by prosecutors, instead arguing that she was emotionally distraught because of the geographic location.

    “This was my first time in Palm Beach since my wedding, and being here brought up long-buried emotions,” she explained. “I want to offer my sincere apologies to anyone I might have offended with my behavior. I am committed to a transformative and hopeful 2018.”

    Following the incident, she committed herself to rehab and recovery.

    “After the events of last Saturday night in Palm Beach, I am truly embarrassed. I have decided to seek professional guidance and will be voluntarily checking into an alcohol treatment center,” she said. “I intend to turn this unfortunate incident into a positive life changing event. Once again, I sincerely apologize for my actions. I have the greatest respect for police officers and the job they do.”

    Now, de Lesseps is better and back in the spotlight in a cabaret show.

    “Nine months ago, I was in jail, and now I’m a cabaret star,” she said in the season 11 trailer. “Isn’t that crazy?”

    Given that the cast of the Real Housewives is provided alcohol to drive the drama, de Lesseps may find herself relying on her co-stars to stay clean… and her recovery may become a driving narrative of the show.

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • New York Counties Skeptical Of Marijuana Legalization

    New York Counties Skeptical Of Marijuana Legalization

    In the more rural counties upstate, sheriffs and others are concerned about the effect that marijuana legalization will have on road safety.

    As New York state moves forward with plans to legalize the recreational use of cannabis, some counties in the state are expressing skepticism and considering whether to “opt out” of recreational cannabis. 

    If marijuana is legalized in New York, counties may be able to stop marijuana businesses from operating within their boundaries, according to WKBW Buffalo. 

    Chautauqua County in Northwest NY is one of the counties that is wary of marijuana legalization, according to Chautauqua County Executive George Borrello. 

    “It’s irresponsible to legalize recreational marijuana,” he said, adding that the bill being considered by the state does not make the rules around recreational cannabis use clear. 

    Niagara County Legislator Jesse Gooch said that he does not have a strong opinion on marijuana legalization, but he would like to hear from his constituents about their concerns. Because of that, he plans to host community forums to discuss whether Niagara County should opt out of legalization by not allowing marijuana to be bought, grown or sold in the county. 

    “I would like to set up a couple of open forums where we invite the public residents to come in and really just talk it out,” Gooch said. 

    NY Governor Andrew Cuomo expressed opposition to legalization as little as two years ago, but now supports a bill to legalize recreational use for people over 21. He has essentially said that the move is inevitable. 

    “It’s a false choice legalize marijuana or not, because we are there already,” Cuomo said, according to WIVB

    Despite that, law enforcement in New York has been against legalization. In the more rural counties upstate, sheriffs and others are concerned about the effect that marijuana legalization will have on road safety, according to Thomas Dougherty, Livingston County Sheriff.

    Dougherty said officers will need to be specially trained to detect whether a driver is operating under the influence of marijuana

    “I don’t know many agencies that can afford to have a full force of [drug recognition experts], some of the largest counties have 3 or 4. Again we have major concerns on what will be the fiscal impact,” he said. 

    Dr. Gale Burstein, Erie County Health Commissioner, said that since she has no say in whether marijuana use is legalized, she’s just doing her best to prepare for how that may impact public health in the county. 

    “We know that you can get addicted to marijuana. That’s a known fact, even though people don’t believe that,” she said. “In states where marijuana has been legalized, they’ve seen a much higher incidence of impaired driving and very serious motor vehicle accidents compared to states where marijuana has not been legalized for recreational use.”

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • New York Launches Campaign To Promote Addiction Treatment Resources

    New York Launches Campaign To Promote Addiction Treatment Resources

    The “Know Your Facts” campaign will promote information about addiction treatment resources, insurance coverage and support systems.

    The New York State Office of Alcoholism and Substance Abuse Services (OASAS) announced Monday that it is launching a new campaign to educate the public on addiction and treatment resources in the state.

    The PSA campaign, called “Know the Facts,” is designed to help direct people to addiction services and help, according to a press release by New York Governor Andrew Cuomo and OASAS Commissioner Arlene González-Sánchez.

    The recent press around the opioid crisis in the U.S. has spurred multiple information campaigns about addiction across the country. As the public learns more about the nature of addiction and that there’s no shame in seeking treatment, New York officials have found that there is a lack of awareness about where and how individuals can access that treatment.

    “The key is making sure people are aware of the resources available and that they have access to them,” said New York State Heroin and Opioid Abuse Task Force co-chair and Lt. Gov. Kathy Hochul. “Lives can be saved and returned to normal with help and support. With this campaign, we hope to encourage people to start their journey on the road to recovery.”

    According to the New York State Department of Health, 12% of residents 12 or older “experience a substance use disorder (addiction or abuse) annually” and over 1.9 million individuals living in the state have a “substance abuse problem.”

    The new campaign will run in both English and Spanish throughout the state until March 25. It will promote information about the availability of addiction treatment in New York, insurance coverage and payment, and support systems and resources in place for those who are already in recovery.

    According to “Know the Facts,” there are 23 million people in recovery from addiction disorders in the U.S.

    The OASAS website includes a database of addiction treatment centers in the state of New York that individuals can search through to find an appropriate program.

    The NYS OASAS Treatment Availability Dashboard returns results for 555 programs for adults and 244 programs for adolescents when searching within 100 miles of New York. There are also databases for gambling addiction treatment, disability services, and mental health resources, among many other related tools.

    “The challenges New Yorkers statewide face in trying to break the grip of addiction are immense, yet they are too often needlessly compromised by stigma and misinformation,” says chairwoman of the Assembly Committee on Alcoholism and Drug Abuse, Linda B. Rosenthal. “While New York desperately needs to continue expanding its harm reduction infrastructure, it is vital we take steps to better illuminate and promote the supports already in place.”

    The press release also recommends CombatAddiction.ny.gov for addiction-related resources and Talk2Prevent for information on how to best discuss addiction and drug use with young people.

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • New York Should Use Marijuana Taxes to Repair Subways, Report Says

    New York Should Use Marijuana Taxes to Repair Subways, Report Says

    One NYU professor makes the case for why the state should use marijuana tax revenue to fund the MTA’s Fast Forward plan to fix the popular transportation system.

    For New York City residents, the simple act of taking the subway can come with a host of problems: long delays in crowded, poorly ventilated and aging cars, and stations without basic elements of accessibility, such as elevators.

    Delays can impact the schedules of the more than 1.7 billion individuals that use the subway each year, and late employees can cost businesses more than $380 million per year. The Metropolitan Transit Authority announced a “Fast Forward” plan to address these concerns, but the project is expected to take a decade and cost more than $40 billion.

    New York University (NYU) professor Mitchell L. Moss has a possible solution; use the tax revenue from legalized marijuana sales to fund the subway project.

    Moss’s plan, outlined in a report published by the NYU/Wagner Rudin Center for Transportation Policy and Management, suggests that legalizing marijuana could add between $110 and $428 million in annual tax revenue to Empire State coffers. That figure is lower than a projection by New York State’s health department, which suggested that taxes from legal marijuana could yield $670 million per year. 

    Figures like those – as well as growing dismay over the subway system’s woes by the public – have generated interest from city officials, including the Metropolitan Transportation Sustainability Advisory Workgroup, a panel assembled by New York Governor Andrew Cuomo and Mayor Bill de Blasio to conceptualize ways to pay for the subway project.

    Some members of the panel, including former City Council speaker Melissa Mark-Viverito, as well as current City Council speaker Corey Johnson, have voiced their support for the plan.

    With Democrats currently in control of the state Senate, Governor Cuomo suggesting that a legalization bill is in the draft stage, and subway riders voicing support for the plan in an informal New York Times poll, Moss’s proposal appears to be gaining traction.

    But as Vox pointed out, exactly how much marijuana tax revenue can be diverted to transportation remains unclear. 

    Colorado, which has earned $862 million in total revenue from legal marijuana since 2014, is one of the few states that use those funds for transportation issues. According to the Denver Office of Marijuana Policy, the city will put $9 million into “mobility projects,” like sidewalk repair and the creation of bike lines, in 2019. But the majority of tax funds will go towards regulation of the city’s marijuana sales, as well as education and safety.

    The $9 million is just part of the remaining funds left after those issues are paid.

    Eric Escudero, who serves as director of communication for the Office, said that the funds are welcome, but “it’s not going to solve every issue that needs financial or taxpayer support.”

    He noted that changes to the marijuana market – specifically, when new states initiate legalization – might impact how much tax revenue can be earned. As a result, Denver does not look at their marijuana tax as a silver bullet.

    “It’s important that you don’t promise the streets are going to be paved with gold because of marijuana, because that won’t happen,” he said.

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • New York's Opioid Prescription Monitoring System Needs Improvement

    New York's Opioid Prescription Monitoring System Needs Improvement

    The newly re-elected State Comptroller has found some major issues with the opioid prescription monitoring system. 

    An audit of the New York State opioid prescription monitoring database found that patients in treatment for opioid dependency may have received potentially dangerous opioid prescriptions outside of their treatment programs.

    Newly re-elected State Comptroller Thomas P. DiNapoli issued a statement indicating that some treatment programs were not cross-referencing patients’ treatment with other opioid prescriptions, or coordinating with health care professionals.

    The audit showed that a third of Medicaid recipients in treatment received opioid prescriptions outside of their program; of that number, nearly 500 were said to need medical treatment for an opioid or narcotic overdose within a month of receiving the prescription, and 12 died as a result of said overdose.

    The Internet System for Tracking Over-Prescribing (I-STOP) is a database of records for all controlled substances dispensed in the state and reported by either a pharmacy or dispenser. Treatment programs are not required to disclose the medication they give to patients, but in some cases, are required to check I-STOP to determine if a patient is receiving opioid prescriptions from other sources.

    If outside prescriptions are found, the program can consult with health care professionals to determine the appropriate response, after consent from the patient is obtained.

    According to the statement, DiNapoli’s auditors looked at state Department of Health (DOH) records from October 1, 2013 to September 30, 2017 and found 18,786 Medicaid patients who were receiving opioid treatment—usually methadone—through a recovery program as well as additional opioid prescriptions. Of that group, 493 required medical attention as a result of 691 opioid or narcotic overdoses that occurred within a month of receiving the opioid, and 12 died while under medical care.

    The statement also reviewed medical records from a sample group of 25 Medicaid recipients from three treatment programs. Data from Medicaid showed that these individuals had received 1,065 Medicaid opioid prescriptions while undergoing treatment; additionally, these treatment programs only cross-referenced the patients’ data on 18 occasions, and did not check if a medication-assisted opioid was prescribed for take-home use, which is required by state law.

    Consent forms to coordinate care with prescribers were required of only 13 of the 25 in the sample group, of which three did not sign the form. The programs were aware of only 53% of those Medicaid prescriptions for these patients, while consent to care was coordinated for just 8% of those prescriptions. 

    “New York and the rest of the country are facing an opioid addiction epidemic, and people’s lives are at stake,” said DiNapoli in the statement. “Programs designed to get individuals off highly addicted opioids can only be effective with proper vigilance. The state Department of Health should take steps to help treatment programs and health care providers work together to prevent overdoses that could lead to hospitalizations or death.” 

    DiNapoli’s statement also included a list of recommendations for the DOH to improve I-STOP, including a report that notifies treatment programs when recipients are receiving opioid prescriptions. The DOH did not agree with all of the audit’s conclusions, but added that actions would be taken to address the suggestions.

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Is New York City Handing Out Harsher Penalties For THC Oil Possession?

    Is New York City Handing Out Harsher Penalties For THC Oil Possession?

    A new report reveals a major contradiction in the city’s ongoing efforts to reform marijuana enforcement.

    Getting caught with a cartridge of THC oil can land you in jail in New York City—despite city officials’ promise to decriminalize marijuana offenses.

    A new report by The Appeal highlights the disparity in the city’s enforcement of possession of THC oil versus marijuana in its raw form.

    “Cannabis oil possession carries a harsher charge than regular marijuana possession,” The Appeal reports.

    “Because the oil is classified as a controlled substance, the charge is a Class A misdemeanor, the same class used for low-level heroin and crack possession. Those convicted of the charge can be sentenced to up to a year in jail.”

    The fact that police officers are still treating THC oil possession as a criminal misdemeanor contradicts the city’s ongoing efforts to reform marijuana enforcement.

    On Sept. 1st, the city enacted a new policy to ticket instead of arrest people for public marijuana smoking. Mayor Bill de Blasio claimed that the new policy would reduce marijuana possession arrests by 10,000. Each year, about 17,500 people are arrested in New York City for marijuana possession.

    Neither the mayor’s office nor the NYPD agreed to comment on its policy regarding THC oil.

    “The DA’s office has prosecuted at least 22 THC or cannabis oil cases since Sept. 1, according to public defenders in Brooklyn… In 13 of those cases, people were charged with possessing cannabis oil alone, without any other misdemeanor or felony charges,” The Appeal reports.

    Oren Yaniv, a spokesperson for the Brooklyn district attorney’s office, says the DA is working to reduce marijuana convictions.

    “New York law categorizes THC oil not as marijuana, but as a controlled substance… However, recognizing that THC is the active ingredient in marijuana, we believe that the two forms of marijuana should be treated similarly,” said Yaniv.

    Meanwhile, NY Governor Andrew Cuomo is working on the bigger picture. The state is currently exploring legalizing marijuana for adult use. New York already has a medical marijuana program. However, home cultivation, smokable medical marijuana, and edible products are not allowed under the program.

    This month, during a recent appearance in Buffalo, Governor Cuomo said that marijuana legalization legislation is in the works.

    “We now have a working group that is putting together a piece of legislation that would do it, because the devil is in the details: How do you do it, where do you do it, what are the ages, etc.? What is New Jersey doing? What has Massachusetts done? So that legislation is being crafted. I expect it to be introduced next year. The when and the how, we’re not clear,” Cuomo said.

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • You Can't Keep It Unless You Give It Away

    You Can't Keep It Unless You Give It Away

    The responsibility to give honestly is my job; the responsibility to take honestly is theirs and not for me to determine. I could go crazy trying to decide which homeless person is worthy and which is not.

    It’s one of the odd truths about life in New York City that some days a homeless person might just be the only person who talks to you, especially if you work solo and live alone. During my months-long stay in New York this year, I walked alone, ate alone, sat alone at two plays, shopped alone, got lost alone, took the subway alone, all with no conversations and no interactions. Of course, I was partially to blame. In my zeal to be considered what I thought a real New Yorker was, I had an impassive face perfected and was proud of my aplomb. I wasn’t a tourist, after all. I was there taking a class, trying vainly to get the city out of my bloodstream so that I wouldn’t suddenly run away from my husband in Arizona and move there permanently.

    One of the things I had to do to be like a native was ignore the homeless. I took my cue from those around me, rushing to wherever I needed to be, looking impassively straight ahead when the solicitations started on my subway car. It was hard. Hands beseeching, cups outstretched, people sleeping in piles of blankets on the sidewalks, the distinction between blankets and human being inside not always apparent.

    This plan seemed to work. At least, until my depression recurred and I began to feel I was dying. One night, before burrowing into my hotel room, I went to get some fruit from a market on Park Avenue, passing a man on the way there whom I thought was loudly ranting into his phone about “some woman.” Certainly none of my business so I knew I needed to paste on my impassive face and walk on by. But on the way back, carrying a bag of bananas and oranges, I listened more closely and I realized the woman he was ranting about was me.

    “Look at her with all that fruit. She can’t give me some. Don’t even care, walking on by with bananas and oranges, swinging that bag. She’s evil, don’t care about nothing and no one.”

    At my home in Arizona I carry money in my car’s center console in case I happen to be pulled up alongside a person with a sign standing in the center median at an intersection. I’m a little cautious so I move my purse away from the window, roll it down, look in the person’s eyes and wish them the best.

    But I was in New York and taking cues from real New Yorkers. Yes, the homeless problem was overwhelming here, so overwhelming that perhaps the only way to deal with it is not to encourage it. I understand I was dropped here out of the blue with no history and no understanding of the differences between the New York homeless problem and that of my home state.

    Back in my hotel room, the fruit put away, I was shaken. What did I think I was doing? My 12-step program teaches me that I am no better than any other human being on earth, and certainly no better than any possible person who may have a substance use disorder. It teaches me that judgement is poison for any addict. And that the responsibility to give honestly is my job; the responsibility to take honestly is theirs and not for me to determine. I could go crazy trying to decide which homeless person is worthy and which is not. I know from the program that if I hold something too closely I’ll lose it and only by living fearlessly and letting go can I be free. And I read somewhere that the universe, God, Higher Power – whatever – doesn’t handle money, that what we have in excess is for us to give.

    It turns out that it’s impossible to get New York out of my bloodstream. If anything, I fall more in love with it, with the grid lines of the streets and avenues, with the museums, with the crowds and food, and with the beauty of spring when it suddenly appears, and I find myself basking in the unbelievable sunshine at Bryant Park.

    I know all the controversy out there about the homeless and giving. I know that some say New Yorkers should only give to the Coalition for the Poor. Others say that giving only increases the homeless population, encouraging them to stay in certain neighborhoods. Some people give food, others nothing. It’s a seemingly unsolvable issue, even with nearly two billion dollars in the state’s budget to fix it.

    But the political became personal when I suddenly understood that I hadn’t become someone else when I came to New York; I had to stop pretending.

    I checked my wallet. Among some larger bills, I had nine single dollars. I folded them all and put them in the back pockets of my jeans, so they’d be easy to reach. The next day when I heard someone ask for help I looked into my fellow human being’s eyes and remembered that I’m one of them. It changed how I felt about the streets, the dread of the nonstop pleas. Suddenly I sought the encounter. I was waiting with their money in my back pocket.

    I never ran out of single dollars and each night I had more of them in my wallet to hand out the next day.

    In recovery programs, they say that what we’re doing by sponsoring people and doing service and putting ourselves out there is not so much to help others as it is to help ourselves, so we can stay sober. What I learned was that I wasn’t giving money to save all the homeless people in New York. I’m not that important and one dollar isn’t going to do that much. I was giving the money to save my own life. I was doing it so I could stay human.

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Prohibition Party Reignites Anti-Alcohol Campaign In New York

    Prohibition Party Reignites Anti-Alcohol Campaign In New York

    The state party is focused on pushing back on New York’s flourishing alcohol industry.

    Seems like alcohol prohibition didn’t die with the 21st Amendment. In fact, support for the idea is alive and well in New York state, where a small group of prohibitionists are reigniting the fight for temperance.

    The Prohibition Party of New York (established in 1869) has been dormant since national prohibition—the ban on the manufacture and sale of alcoholic beverages—ended in the United States in 1933. But the group reemerged in 2017 with a small membership, led by state party chairman Jonathan Makeley of Amherst.

    “The motivation for re-establishing our state party organization was to have a positive influence on the condition of our state. To promote good government based in moral principle, ethical public service, and policies to advance the public well-being,” the NY Prohibition Party said to NYup.com. “To promote temperance, to advance policies to deal with the problem of alcohol in our society, and to advance other reforms to help build a better future for the people of New York state.”

    The state party believes that the common anti-prohibition narrative is perpetuated by myths that are “not historically accurate.” For example, the party believes that instead of being a failure, prohibition succeeded in drastically cutting drinking rates and decreasing crime in the U.S.

    The state party is particularly focused on pushing back on New York’s support for its alcohol industry.

    According to NYup, under Gov. Andrew Cuomo, New York has cut fees and regulations for breweries, wineries and distilleries amounting to millions of dollars, which has allowed the number of alcohol producers in the state to double since 2012.

    “Gov. Cuomo is perhaps the worst governor on alcohol issues that our state has had since Herbert Lehman (New York’s governor when Prohibition ended in 1933). His support for the alcohol industry is unethical and has harmed the people of New York,” says the state party.

    It’s also the New York Prohibition Party’s goal to encourage New York towns to stay “dry” or “partly dry” (having some restrictions on alcohol use/sales). Currently there are 8 completely dry towns and 36 more that are partly dry.

    And in addition to ending pro-alcohol policies in New York, the state party also supports more substance abuse prevention efforts and to “expand education on the harms of alcohol and the benefits of teetotalism (complete abstinence from alcohol).”

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Child Brings Crack Home From Daycare, Thinking It Was A Tooth

    Child Brings Crack Home From Daycare, Thinking It Was A Tooth

    The child was brought to the hospital after telling her mother she had put the “teeth” in her mouth.

    A four-year-old in New York was taken to the hospital after inadvertently bringing cocaine home from daycare, telling her mom that she thought it was a tooth. 

    Sabrina Straker’s daughter Serenity said that another child at daycare had given her his “teeth,” Straker told WPIX. She showed her mother a small container with the item inside. 

    “Inside was something small and white, which she described as a tooth—looked like rocks or pebbles. Then I was curious,” Straker said.

    The mother thought she might know what the items were, but didn’t want to believe it, she told PIX11. “This can’t be what I think it is,” Straker recalled thinking. “How did this get in the daycare?”

    Serenity then showed her mom that she had even more “teeth.” “She comes back, ‘well Mommy, I have a lot of his teeth,’ so then I have a third capsule,” Straker said. She decided to call the police. 

    “This can’t be what I’m thinking it is, because how could that be in a preschool?” she said. 

    The daycare operator said that someone must have thrown the drugs onto the daycare’s property. “We did a thorough check. The children are fine. We called the parents,” Yvette Joseph said.

    However, Straker said it is decidedly not fine. When police arrived they tested the items in the capsules and identified that they were cocaine. “Lo and behold whatever this test kit is, it was blue and he said, ‘this is what it is. That’s what that means. This is crack cocaine.’ I said ‘What? Come again? No, I didn’t just hear that,’” Straker recalled. 

    Serenity was brought to the hospital because she told her mom that she put the “teeth” in her mouth. At the hospital, she tested positive for cocaine.

    “She couldn’t sit down. She was beyond bouncy, very loquacious, just all over the place, literally, talking to herself, looking in the mirror, saying she sees three of herself. Once they did the urine test it came back positive that she had cocaine in her system,” Straker said.

    Although Serenity was fine, her mother said that the incident could have had a very different ending. “Had my daughter ingested the capsule and not spit it out, I would be planning a funeral,” she said. “Luckily, because she spit it out, she’s still here.”

    Straker said that she wants the daycare to be shut down, since staff did not notice the children passing around the drugs. 

    “No one was watching the children,” she said. “There are 15 kids in the room with two teachers and two aides, where were they when this was going on?”

    View the original article at thefix.com

  • Mental Health Education Now Required In New York Schools

    Mental Health Education Now Required In New York Schools

    New York is the first state to require mental health education in all grades.

    This fall, New York schools became the first in the U.S. to teach mandatory mental health education to students of all ages.

    “All schools” across New York state are now required to teach mental health literacy in health class in elementary school, middle school, and high school.

    New York enacted the requirement in July—same as Virginia, which now requires mental health education to be taught in the 9th and 10th grade.

    There’s a growing movement to lessen the stigma of mental illness as suicide rates in the U.S. rise. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the national suicide rate increased by 30% since 1999. Suicide is the second-leading cause of death among 15 to 24-year-olds, and is the 10th leading cause of death in the U.S. overall, the agency has reported.

    According to the New York law, “90% of youth who die by suicide suffer from depression or other diagnosable and treatable mental illness at the time of their death.”

    It is “critical” to teach young people about mental health, said New York’s Education Commissioner MaryEllen Elia. “When young people learn about mental health and that it is an important aspect of overall health and well-being, the likelihood increases they will be able to effectively recognize signs and symptoms in themselves and others and will know where to turn for help—and it will decrease the stigma that attaches to help-seeking,” said Elia.

    The purpose of teaching kids about mental health in schools is to “advance mental health literacy among young people statewide as schools prepare students with lifelong skills in mental health and wellness and increase their awareness of when and how to address treatment or support for themselves of others,” according to the New York State Center for School Health.

    CNN reported in July that the curriculum should cover “the multiple dimensions of health and include the relationship of physical and mental health.”

    In August 2017, the NYS Mental Health Education Advisory Council was established to provide guidance to educators. The new curriculum must teach nine key points, according to the Daily Mail. These include identifying the signs of mental health issues, finding resources for help and support, and addressing the negative stigma that surrounds mental illness.

    “We need to change attitudes around mental health. Starting to educate children in schools makes sense,” said Meredith Coles, PhD, professor of psychology at Binghamton University.

    View the original article at thefix.com