Drug-Free Tennessee holds a variety of events
throughout the year to benefit the community through education and awareness.
According to the Tennessee Bureau of Investigations, 80% of crimes
in the state have some drug-related nexus. Additionally, Tennessee's uninsured
coupled with a high rate of prescribed painkillers are contributing factors
behind the state's rise in heroin addiction and overdoses, according to a new
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention report.
To protect people from the disastrous effects of drugs, Drug-Free
Tennessee is meeting with community leaders to educate and provide
resources during Red Ribbon Week. Organizers are calling the meetings a “Red
Ribbon Invitational” to help promote the Red Ribbon campaign.
Red Ribbon Week occurs during the last week of October each year
and is a time to educate people and help prevent drug abuse. The Red Ribbon
Campaign was started when drug traffickers in Mexico City murdered DEA agent
Kiki Camarena in 1985. This began the continuing tradition of displaying Red
Ribbons as a symbol of intolerance towards the use of drugs. The mission of the
Red Ribbon Campaign is to present a unified and visible commitment towards the
creation of a Drug-Free America, according to redribbon.org.
Drug-Free Tennessee distributes copies of The Truth About Drugs, a
booklet that helps people understand what drugs are and how they affect the
user. Drug-Free Tennessee is a chapter of the Foundation for a Drug-Free World,
an international non-profit organization. Its materials demonstrate the dangers
of drugs through factual information and interviews with former addicts giving
personal perspectives on each of the substances covered.
For more information on Drug-Free Tennessee, visit drugfreetn.org.
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