The BACCHUS Network Newsletter Area12
March 2008
What's in this newsletter?
:: BACCHUS Safe Spring Break Snapshot Photo Contest
:: Ping My Health And Be A Winner!
:: Area 12 Webpage? Say What?
:: Award Winning Program: Condom Bingo
:: Safe Spring Break
:: ADHD Drugs Won't Put Your Children at Risk
:: Feeling Tire? Exercise a Little!
Hello Readers!

Please be sure to view this newsletter via a web-based browser so you can be able to view all the images and the layout!

Thanks for reading and I hope you enjoy!

Mark Freeman.
Student Advisory Committee
 
BACCHUS Safe Spring Break Snapshot Photo Contest
By Mark Freeman
Student Advisory Committee

Interested in winning $250 for you Peer Education group?  With the BACCHUS Safe Spring Break Snapshot Photo Contest you will be promoting safe habits during spring break as well as helping your group!  So what is there to lose?  To enter is simple!

  1. Electronic photo submissions must be made by the BACCHUS Peer Education affiliate on record with the national headquarters.
  2. BACCHUS peer education affiliates can submit up to five photos with captions for consideration.
  3. Photos must be of the highest clarity and quality (1000 MB) for posting to the BACCHUS website or used in print in the Peer Educator.
  4. We are relying on your peer education group to submit photos that exemplify responsibility, safety and fun during Spring Break.  Peer education groups should seek permission in writing from subjects appearing in the submitted photos. 
  5. We strongly encourage you to run your own campus-based contest and submit the winning photo(s) to BACCHUS.
Want more information? Go here! And good luck!
Ping My Health And Be A Winner!
By Mark Freeman
Student Advisory Committee

Interested in being entered into a drawing for your choice of either a FREE iPod or $150??  Go to www.pingmyhealth.org and take the survey! This survey is completely anonymous and takes only a few minutes of your time to complete.  The only requirement is that you be between the ages of 18 to 30 years old.

     At the end of the survey you will receive a report about your overall health based on the survey.  But be careful to read questions carefully! You might accidently say you smoke marijuana every day and it will throw off your final results (it happens...)!

     Have fun learning about your results and good luck on winning the prizes!  Pass this along to your friends and colleagues so people can be able to gauge themselves!

Area 12 Webpage? Say What?
By Mark Freeman
Student Advisory Committee

That is correct! Area 12 has a webpage! And it needs your input!  Via the BACCHUS Network, they have established Area webpages that the areas can utilize to their uses. Ours can be found by going here.

     Now, this is all nice and dandy, but we need your help!  We need ideas on what to put on here and we definitely want pictures!  If you have any ideas or submissions you would like to see put on the webpage please e-mail me at Area12SAC@bacchusgamma.org, I would to hear from you. =]

     The webpage currently has contact information for our areas team, Regional Conference information, and the universities in our area.  Now this is all fine, but with your input we could have so much more!  So gather some pictures and start thinking of some ideas!
 
University of North Carolina Wilmington's Nationally Award Winning Program:  Condom Bingo
By Trisha M. Schleicher, MS, CHES

UNCW Condom Bingo Peeps

Topic of Program:  
Sexual Health

Program objective:  
Participants will:
  • Be able to explain the positive and negative aspects of various contraceptive methods
  • Understand the importance of communication before and during sexual activity and be able to apply
  • Recognize the significance of STD testing and be familiar with campus and community resources for contraception and STD testing
  • Be able to develop safer sex practices to reduce the risk of unintended pregnancy, and disease transmissions.

Target audience:  
University of North Carolina Wilmington's Campus Community.

Program description:  
This is not your mother's Safer-Sex Workshop!  This bingo-style interactive program is focused on sexual responsibility and is designed to increase student's knowledge of contraception, sexually transmitted diseases, general sexual health, and the importance of healthy sexual relationships.   By asking and answering questions, and engaging in discussion, this workshop increases knowledge and comfort about sexual decision making.

UNCW Condom Bingo

Promotion/publicity:   
Promotion and publicity of this program was rather extensive and extremely effective. Over 60 UNCW students attended this program with another 35 that were turned away due to lack of space. This was the first program that the Health Promotion Peer Educators were primarily responsible for and were proud of the attendance turnout. Fortunately, this program has ballooned into our top program and has been presented to over 500 students at UNCW in a variety of settings since the pilot during Sexual Responsibility Week 2007.

All Resident Advisors on campus were notified approximately two weeks prior to the program in order to inform and encourage on-campus students to attend.  

Health and Physical Education instructors were given "invitations" to distribute to their students during class and were encouraged to offer extra credit for attending.  

The UNCW Health Promotion Peer Educators:
  • chalked the sidewalks of campus notifying "everyone" of Condom Bingo
  • invited all of the "friends" utilizing FaceBook
  • drove a "Condom Cart" (aka:  decorated Golf Cart) during Sexual Responsibility Week handing out invitations for Condom Bingo along with Safer Sex kits (for the sexually active)
  • made announcements regarding Condom Bingo in their academic classes, sororities, and other campus organizations
  • hung over 60 Condom Bingo flyers throughout campus one week prior to event
  • notified UNCW Roomers of event, and information was published
Area Conference is Getting Closer!
By Amanda Wattenmaker, MS, CHES

Hi everyone!! VCU is ecstatic to host this year's Area 12 Spring Conference in less than a month! We have 175 participants attending so there will be a lot to learn and even more peers to network with than ever before. DO WE HAVE A CONFERENCE FOR YOU! We have an awesome, jam-packed schedule and lots of goodies awaiting you in Richmond. We look forward to greeting you at conference registration between 5-7 pm  on Friday March 28 in the VCU Student Commons, followed by a buffet dinner from 5:30-7:30. Please park in the Main Street parking Deck (directions below), and save your ticket which we will validate at registration.

REMEMBER: We are having a canned food competition to benefit the Central Virginia Food Bank (whose supply has been very low!) Please bring your bags of canned food with you once you park your car in the deck. There will be a room in the VCU Student Commons where you will "register" your cans before registering yourself! Don't know where the VCU Student Commons is located? No worries, VCU Project REACH peers will be nearby to help direct you!

Other reminders: Saturday is Spirit Day and your peer group's chance to win the coveted Spirit Award! We hope to see you all decked out! Also, we will start Saturday morning with yoga/pilates time, or a campus walk so be sure to dress for your choice of activity:)

Please feel free to contact me with any questions or concerns (wattenmakeab@vcu.edu, 804 828-6919) We'll see you in a few weeks at VCU!

vcu

Directions to the Main Street parking Deck at VCU

Arriving from the east or south by Interstate 64W/95N:
Take exit 76A for Chamberlayne Avenue.
Turn left onto Chamberlayne Parkway (cross a small bridge).
Turn right onto Leigh Street.
Turn left on Belvidere Street.
Drive six blocks to Main Street.
Turn right on Main Street (Engineering Building on the corner).
At the first light, turn left on Laurel Street.
Entrance to Main Street Parking Deck is on the right.

Arriving from the west or north by Interstate 64E/95S:
Take exit 76B for Belvidere Street.
At the first light, turn left on Leigh Street.
At the next light, turn right on Belvidere Street.
Drive six blocks to Main Street.
Turn right on Main Street (Engineering Building on the corner).
At the first light, turn left on Laurel Street.
Entrance to Main Street Parking Deck is on the right.
A Safe Spring Break Can Also Be A Satisfying Spring Break
Tara Daniel and Chance Dorland
Student Trustees

Spring Break is just around the corner, or-as we associated with BACCHUS have come to call it-Safe Spring Break.  Safe Spring Break is a campaign, but it is also an idea, one that resonates with a population who increasingly recognizes that not everyone is heading out to a party destination.

     How does your campus promote Safe Spring Break?  Do you pull out pledges that ask students to make a commitment to their safety?  Do you talk about sun safety and travel safety?  Do you reiterate messages about alcohol use and sexual responsibility?  Or, do you simply have discussions about Spring Break plans and being prepared?

     However you spread the idea of Safe Spring Break, formally or informally, you are providing an important service.  You are letting the students know that what they do outside of the gates of their campuses matters just as much as their activities inside:  peer education is not about creating a campus that conforms to such and such ideals, but inspiring the students who populate that campus to be conscientious decision-makers wherever they may go.

     Safe Spring Break also facilitates an understanding about safety:  it is transcendent.  Safety is a component of every activity-we speak not only to those heading to party destinations, but discuss travel safety with those on alternative trips.  Safety does not detract from any activity, but simply provides another element to consider.   In the end, our safe choices allow us to have fun and feel comfortable, when other paths just as easily taken could have lead to the opposite.

     Whether Safe Spring Break or another campaign allows you to show students it is not only what they do or where they do it, but also how they continually make those choices, we wish you luck.  You are teaching that choices have impacts.  You are promoting safety and well-being as de facto aspects of the decision making process.  You are building the leaders of tomorrow.  You are creating students who in turn reach out to other students as they make the little decisions-where to go for Spring Break-and the big decisions-how to plan to stay safe throughout their journeys. 

ADHD Drugs Won't Raise Risk of Substance Abuse
HealthDay News

Parents of children who are prescribed psychostimulants for attention deficit-hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) might have one less thing to worry about now that a new study concludes these kids are no more likely than their peers to abuse drugs and alcohol as young adults.

      The report, which was funded by the National Institute of Health, is published in the March issue of the American Journal of Psychiatry. 

     "The results should reassure clinicians who might be hesitant to treat ADHD because of concerns about future substance abuse," said study co-author Michael C. Monuteaux, assistant director of research at the pediatric psychopharmacology program at Massachusetts General hospital. 

Want to read more? Click here.

Feeling Tired? Exercise a Little!
Reuters

Couch potatoes who complain they are tired all the time have an easy solution -- a little light exercise.

     Regular, low-intensity workouts such as a leisurely stroll can boost energy levels by 20 percent and decrease fatigue by 65 percent, a team at the University of Georgia found.

     "Too often we believe that a quick workout will leave us worn out, especially when we are already feeling fatigued," Tim Puetz, who helped conduct the study, said in a statement.

     "However, we have shown that regular exercise can actually go a long way in increasing feelings of energy, particularly in sedentary individuals."

Want to read more? Click here.

If you have any comments, suggestions or concerns about this newsletter, or information found in it, please feel free to e-mail me at area12sac@bacchusgamma.org. Just please note: put "BACCHUS Area 12" at the beginning of your e-mail headline, so I can more easily navigate through my cluttered e-mail to find you.

Thank you again, and please forward this to your students!
 
Sincerely,

Mark Freeman.
Student Advisory Committee
The BACCHUS Network
area12sac@bacchusgamma.org