In the News
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US Surgeon General’s Turn the Tide Initiative Drives Home Need for Action to Ensure Doctors Educate Patients and Themselves on Opiate Addiction
Posted 8/24/2016
At a NJ addiction forum, hosted by Senators Booker and Menendez in cooperation with Partnership for a Drug-Free New Jersey, the organization chair, US Surgeon General Vivek Murthy called doctors, nurses, and other healthcare providers, “the first line of defense in the battle against addiction”.
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nj.com: 'A poor man's way to get by': Opioid addicts turn to diarrhea medicine
Posted 8/21/2016
Loperamide, the active ingredient in Johnson & Johnson's Imodium A-D, is meant to be taken in dosages of two to four milligrams. When ingested in megadoses — for some, up to 24 times the minimum dosage — it induces a weak high.
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Connect and Spend Quality Time with Family with the Second Annual New Jersey Online Fishing Tournament
Posted 8/18/2016
The downtime from school and the warm months of summer encourage families to get outside and spend some treasured time together before the hectic schedules of September begin again. To help families get active and motivate them to spend time with their children and keep them away from drugs, The Partnership for a Drug-Free New Jersey is holding the second annual “Don’t Get Hooked on Drugs” Online New Jersey Fishing Tournament. The contest will run from August 19th to August 28th.
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townshipjournal.com: Surgeon General, in New Jersey, adresses opioid abuse
Posted 8/15/2016
LIVINGSTON — U.S. Surgeon General Vivek H. Murthy brought his Turn the Tide tour to New Jersey to discuss the current opiate abuse epidemic impacting the state, and discuss steps physicians can take to stem the tide of the epidemic. The Surgeon General is currently on a national tour designed to educate and mobilize prescribers to take immediate action to end this epidemic.
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njtvonline.org: Turn the Tide Tour Visits NJ to Prevent Opioid Addiction
Posted 8/9/2016
The surgeon general brought his Turn the Tide Tour to New Jersey at the request of Sens. Bob Menendez and Cory Booker. Also, from the Obama Administration the undersecretary of veterans affairs.
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tapinto.net: U.S. Senators Host Local Forum with U.S. Surgeon General on Heroin and Opioid Crisis in New Jersey
Posted 8/9/2016
LIVINGSTON, NJ – With heroin deaths in New Jersey up 160 percent since 2010 and more than 1,200 overdose-related deaths last year alone, U.S. Senators Bob Menendez and Cory Booker hosted U.S. Surgeon General Vivek Murthy and the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) on Monday at Saint Barnabas Medical Center for a forum on tackling the heroin and opioid-addiction crisis plaguing the nation.
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ComcastNewsmakers.com: Knock Out Opiate Abuse Day [VIDEO]
Posted 8/8/2016
Candace Kelley speaks with Angelo Valente, Executive Director from the Partnership for a Drug-Free NJ, about Knock Out Opiate Abuse Day. Follow us on Twitter: @drugfreenj and Facebook. Recorded on: 8/3/2016.
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northjersey.com: U.S. Surgeon General to join Menendez, Booker for forum on heroin, opioid addiction
Posted 8/8/2016
The U.S. Surgeon General Vivek Murthy will be in New Jersey today for a forum on tackling the heroin and opioid addiction crisis plaguing New Jersey and the nation. Local doctors, treatment providers, and advocates will participate in the discussion that will also feature a demonstration on administering the overdose drug naloxone.
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politickernj.com: Booker, Menendez Host U.S. Surgeon General at N.J. Hospital
Posted 8/8/2016
LIVINGSTON – U.S. Senators Cory Booker and Bob Menendez have long been working to raise awareness and advance policies to combat the ongoing opioid/heroin epidemic that has been plaguing New Jersey and the country. In their most recent effort, the two welcomed U.S. Surgeon General Vivek H. Murthy at the Saint Barnabas Medical Center in Livingston for a Monday forum on the topic.
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app.com - Surgeon General: Doctors must help stop opioids
Posted 8/8/2016
U.S. Surgeon General Vivek Murthy has toured the country with the message that more money is needed to treat opioid addictions given a treatment gap that deprives about a million Americans of the help they need. On Monday, Murthy stopped in New Jersey, this time focusing on the role clinicians can play to keep the epidemic at bay, from prescribing opioids for pain more cautiously to speaking out to legislators.