Sunday, February 5, 2017

Heroin Education and Prevention with PowerPoint, DVD, Video, or a Web Course for Upload to Your Web Site



http://bit.ly/heroin-education-and-prevention - Heroin education and prevention is now a national priority, and unless the correct information and news reaches those at risk of experiment, this crisis of use will continue to destroy lives, impact the economy, and destroy whole communities. Heroin is a deadly dangerous drug, but too many users learn that lesson too late. The problem is short concise and easy to use education about heroin it difficult to find. Communities and schools and employers want to educate their employees, but finding a solid ten minute video is nearly impossible. One with solid content on heroin education and prevention is finally here in this product. You can purchase it right now at https://www.workexcel.com/what-you-should-know-about-heroin or go to http://bit.ly/heroin-education-and-prevention

To educate employees and people in communities, longer products and movies that are outdated are often used. People fall asleep during longer presentation, and it is impractical to go find a group of heroin users to present in front of a group. The answer is a PowerPoint, DVD, Video, or even a web course on heroin education and prevention that can be used anywhere. Here is the key problem – reaching people by smart phone, ipad, desktop computer or tablet, on a TV monitor in a classroom. This program does all.

Not educating people and helping prevent users for experimenting with heroin is contributing the rapid rise of heroin addicts. This destruction can stop, but it takes a strong and concerted effort with their right educational materials. This problem of heroin addiction can grow worse. Who knows how far it will go before it plateaus? The key is reaching children early, teenagers, and young adults, particularly those who at risk for substance abuse experimentation and addiction. Go now to purchase this program with a 100% money back guarantee. You will get he program, a handouts, a test questions, and with the Web course a certificate of completion. 

This program solves the problem of how to educate employees and communities effectively. It puts in your hands a program that is also editable and customizable. Any heroin education and prevention program must have these elements because it is more likely that not you are a professional purchasing this program and you must have the ability to edit the product as you see fit with your own expertise. 

At WorkExcel.com they understand that our customers are professionals at the topics they present. Save time with the formats, reach more people, stop the waste of time searching the internet for the right program, and avoid all the trouble, and have program you own forever with no limits on use and no licensing user fees, or other hurdles to reaching your constituencies.

WorkExcel's training programs are used by the State of Texas, dozens of Universities, the federal government, Army bases, municipalities and schools world wide. We are the trusted source of workplace wellness content for over 20 years run and operated by licensed mental health professionals. Click this link to purchase and do not worry. You can reach us 24/7 and you have access directly to our publisher, Daniel Feerst, BSW, MSW, LISW-CP at 1-800-626-4327 - http://bit.ly/heroin-education-and-prevention – Educating your employees or communities via your employee assistance program is absolutely essential to helping reduce the heroin epidemic. You may also purchase this product over the phone at 1-800-626-4327. We have price increases periodically, so get this product at the lowest rate right now and do no miss out getting this heroin education and prevention program in your library.

Friday, February 3, 2017

Reasonable Suspicion Training: Instructing Supervisors in Assembling Documentation that Works

A checklist for reasonable suspicion is need to train supervisors in confronting an employee for reasonable suspicion training. Be sure to add this element in your drug and alcohol awareness class in how to document incidents properly that can support a request for a drug test is absolutely crucial because organizational or legal challenges, if they arise, will require that the supervisor demonstrated a credible basis for requesting a test.
This makes teaching documentation skills to supervisors, and not just learning about drug and alcohol symptoms, as an important skill. Of course, the DOT does not require you to teach documentation, as illogical as it seems. It makes you wonder why not. One could say this is especially crucial if you are concerned about protecting employee rights.
Nevertheless, did you know that there is a 60% chance that a lawsuit will be won in court by the employee, no matter what the case might be, and that an jury-determined settlement is typically 500% greater than an out of court settlement when it comes to employment claims litigation? Read more . . .

Wednesday, February 1, 2017

Opioid Withdrawal May Cause More Evidence of Drug Use Than Symptoms of Intoxication

Reasonable suspicion training isn't black and white. There are a lot of shades of gray. You should include information about the behavioral patterns of opioid abusers so supervisors are not kept in the dark.

There is a theory being put out there that the rise in social media is fueling the opioid epidemic and the use of prescription drugs, which most of the time means opioid like substances that are synthetically produced. The timing of the drug epidemic is coinciding with rise in social media use. I think this is a red herring.

One theory is that those with a propensity to use psychoactive substances seek information online that will help them maximize the opportunity and knowledge they seek to discover the next big high. And information about narcotics is plentiful online. What comes next is discovering many ways to procure these substances of abuse.

Link to Heroin Prevention Education Program

If you google, “buy oxycodone”, you will reach over 500,000 web sites. At least 50 of them will discuss getting a hold of this drug by buying it online, and overnight service is not uncommon. These are the problems employers are facing in their attempts to spot drug users via reasonable suspicion training instruction, webinars, and organized training sessions for the DOT mandate. It appears that the Internet, and not just social media is heavily responsible for making access to these drugs easier. I would argue more so.

When training supervisors in signs and symptoms of opioid use, discuss the following information: Someone with a opioid drug use addiction will have a strong desire to use opioids. There are many addictions that contribute to the same behavioral syndrome, but absenteeism from work, and not giving a flying F--- about it is classic.

Drugs simply take away or remove the sense of urgency every typically possesses to get up and get going, and get to work on time. Drug abuse or other addictions will undermine this sense of “urgency deterioration. This absenteeism pattern also stems from the problem of inability to control or reduce use. The task is simply too overwhelming physically for the typical person to detox themselves. You may also discover sudden absenteeism after a person gets a paycheck on the 15th of the month, or even that same day knowing they have the money in hand. Most supervisors ignore what they don't see. And with Reasonable suspicion training, what you don't see is the employee at work. So, instruct supervisors in how to develop a preponderance of evidence that employee is using substances of abuse when you do training.

The inability to maintain commitments, promises, relationship dates, homework assignments, project deadlines are all interrupted or made more challenging by drug addiction for the same reasons as discussed above. Supervisors are also like to see or hear about more legal problems with employees who have substance abuse issues.


These legal problems will be associated more often with domestic issues, driving under the influence, or bizarre behavior linked to the drug’s use. Money owed to other users or friends may create significant crisis. Financial problems are especially problematic for drug users, again because of the issues mentioned above. Supervisors will begin hearing about depression, seeing a doctor, rumors about seeing a psychiatrist (last place addicts should go, if they are attending sessions to gain insight on why they use drugs. It’s a fruitless pursuit.

Stomach problems and insomnia are also problems for narcotic (opioid users) because all opioid users will experiment with their own self-detox, and withdrawal symptoms can be quite agitating. This agitation can lead to absenteeism, and these employees will say they have the flu. Indeed, they may not be using drugs at all in that moment. It’s the withdrawal symptoms that are keeping them away from work. Be sure to discuss withdrawal symptoms, not just the symptoms of intoxication with reasonable suspicion training.
#opioidaddiction #heroinaddiction #prescriptiondrugabuse