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  • The National Council on Alcoholism and Drug Dependence fights the stigma and the disease of alcoholism and other drug addictions.
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FACTS

National Council on Alcoholism and Drug Dependence



 NCADD SERVES
  • Alcoholics and Their Families
  • Children, Teenagers and Their Parents
  • Government Policy Makers
  • The Media
  • The Medical Community
  • Medical Researchers
  • Public Health Professionals
  • Educators
  • Other National Health Organizations

 NCADD ACHIEVEMENTS

1940s
  • NCADD aroused public interest in alcoholism and formulated pioneering public education campaigns based on scientific information.
  • NCADD engaged the medical profession in the treatment and rehabilitation of alcoholics, casting alcoholism as a medical problem rather than a moral problem.
  • NCADD established early contact with the national press, general public, business and municipal organizations, universities and medical associations to provide information and education about alcoholism.
  • NCADD was featured in a 1945 March of Time film, “Problem Drinkers,” reaching millions of viewers across the United States.

1950s
  • NCADD worked with leading industrial firms to develop programs addressing employee alcoholism that saved corporate America millions of dollars each year.
  • NCADD established affiliate offices in Britain, New Zealand, South Africa, and Australia and worked with the World Health Organization planning itineraries for foreign professionals studying alcoholism in the United States and Canada.
  • NCADD published Marty Mann’s landmark book, “Primer on Alcoholism,” written for the family, friends and employers of alcoholics.
  • NCADD presented its first Gold Key Award to Bill Wilson, co-founder of Alcoholics Anonymous, recognizing AA’s contribution to the field of alcoholism.

1960s
  • NCADD helped establish the Employee Assistance Professionals Association, the National Nurses Society on Addiction, and the Research Society on Alcoholism; the American Society of Addiction Medicine was once part of NCADD.
  • NCADD created the preeminent reference library specializing in alcoholism and alcoholism programs in the United States, and helped establish teaching programs on alcoholism in lay and professional schools, such as Yale University, Columbia Teachers College, Boston University, University of Utah, University of Pennsylvania, and others.
  • NCADD initiated Alcohol Information Week which was recognized by Presidents Dwight D. Eisenhower, John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson, and continues to sponsor nationally-recognized Alcohol Awareness Month in April.

1970s
  • NCADD campaigned for government recognition of alcoholism as a treatable disease, culminating in passage of the “Comprehensive Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism Prevention, Treatment and Rehabilitation Act” that paved the way for the creation of the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism.
  • NCADD developed the “Medical Criteria for Diagnosis of Alcoholism,” which was jointly published by the American Journal of Psychiatry and the Annals of Internal Medicine, setting professional standards for the diagnosis and treatment of alcoholism for the first time.
  • NCADD produced the first radio and television ad campaigns to educate Americans about alcoholism and to prevent teenagers from drinking.
  • NCADD contributed material and helped establish comprehensive alcoholism research collections at the libraries of Brown University and Syracuse University.
  • NCADD sponsored Operation Understanding which brought together more than 50 well-known and widely respected figures to announce their recovery from alcoholism in Washington, DC during the nation's bicentennial celebration. Newsweek later called it one of the most important news stories of the ‘70s.

1980s
  • NCADD initiated discussions with the U.S. Postal Service on the issuance of an alcoholism postal stamp to raise public awareness of the disease; the stamp was formally issued in 1981.
  • NCADD changed its name, broadening its organizational focus to include Drug Dependence.
  • NCADD succeeded in placing warning labels on all alcoholic beverage containers through its federal advocacy efforts.
  • NCADD influenced legislation leading to the Minimum Legal Drinking Age.
  • NCADD established the national HOPE Line (800/NCA-CALL) for information and referral in conjunction with “The Betty Ford Story” which aired on national network television; the toll-free service still receives more than 30,000 pleas for help each year.

1990s
  • NCADD developed a comprehensive definition of alcoholism in conjunction with the American Society of Addiction Medicine that was widely acclaimed and published in a 1992 issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association.
  • NCADD pioneered a family intervention network, provided by trained and certified NCADD Affiliates.
  • NCADD originated a highly-effective prevention program to help parents talk to their children about alcohol use and created the video “What Should I Tell My Children About Drinking?” narrated by actress Meryl Streep.

2000s
  • NCADD honored Senator Paul Wellstone and Representative Jim Ramstad for their sponsorship of legislation that would prohibit private health insurers who offer addiction treatment coverage from imposing discriminatory limits on these benefits.
  • NCADD convened a series of Community Forums on Stigma and Discrimination to collect testimony and prepare public policy recommendations.
  • NCADD joined with other advocacy organizations to oppose an NBC-TV proposal to air alcohol advertising on network television and to protest a major marketing campaign by an internationally known perfume distributor for a fragrance named “Addict.” Both efforts were successful.
 
 
 NCADD NATIONAL OFFICE
  • Advises the legislative and executive branches of the federal government on alcohol and other drug policies

  • Advocates for alcoholic and other drug dependent persons and their families

  • Provides objective information to the public and the media

  • Develops prevention and education initiatives with an emphasis on youth

  • Coordinates a National Intervention Network (800-654-HOPE) to educate and assist the families and friends of addicted persons and operates the Hope Line (800-NCA-CALL), a toll-free information and referral service

  • Participates in various coalitions, collaborates with the medical community and other non-profit organizations to achieve broader support for concerns about alcohol and other drugs

  • Produces educational materials about alcoholism and dependence on other drugs

  • Publishes the Washington Report, a monthly public policy newsletter, and the NCADD Amethyst, a quarterly, user-friendly information tool that also reports medical and scientific advances

  • Maintains the Registry of Addiction Recovery (ROAR), a volunteer program that encourages Americans all over the country to speak openly about their experiences with addiction

  • Operates an acclaimed website (www.ncadd.org) that now attracts over 65,000 visitors per month
 
 
 NCADD AFFILIATES PROVIDE
  • Objective information and referral for individuals, families and others seeking intervention and treatment

  • Community prevention and education programs

  • Local media advocacy campaigns

  • Resource Centers for literature and audio-visual materials

  • Presentations to raise community awareness at schools, businesses and civic organizations

  • Advocacy for alcoholics and other drug dependent persons and their families in local and state governments
 
 
 SOURCES OF SUPPORT
NCADD, which does not accept funding from the alcoholic beverage or tobacco industries, relies on contributions from individuals, foundations and corporations for financial support.
 
 
 MODEL PROGRAMS
Through its Affiliates, NCADD has long conducted successful programs to prevent and treat alcohol- and other drug-related problems in communities across America. These programs cover a broad range of services, including:
  • job training and aftercare for parolees (New York, NY)

  • preparing research-based alcohol curricula for college campuses (Lincoln, NE)

  • providing assessment and referral services to the juvenile court system focused on underage drinking and drug use (Des Moines, IA)

  • working with a broad range of women -- from teenagers to corporate employees to professionals working in the field of alcoholism and other drug addictions - to heighten awareness of Fetal Alcohol Syndrome (Long Beach, CA)

  • reaching out to the elderly regarding drug interactions and addiction (Montclair, NJ)

  • working with parents and schools to promote healthy parenting skills to limit the incidence of underage drinking (Buffalo, NY)

  • developing educational curricula to raise public awareness of the advertising tactics used by tobacco and alcohol companies to lure young people (Montgomery, AL)

  • designing programs to deal effectively with the problem of alcoholics without access to treatment (Danbury, CT)

  • providing educational and support groups for children of addicted parents (Cincinnati, OH)

  • presenting educational intervention programs for teenage drivers who are arrested for possession of alcohol (Grand Island, NE)

  • working with the police department and local bars to prevent the proliferation of club drugs; creating mentoring programs for boys and girls (Santa Barbara, CA)

  • providing family support groups for people seeking education and intervention for the effects of alcohol and drug dependencies (Northwest Florida)
 
 
 SOME HISTORICAL REFLECTIONS ON NCADD’s IMPACT ON THE FIELD OF ALCOHOLISM

“Alcoholism is a broad public health problem involving a complex interplay of many factors. In its program in the field of alcoholism, the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare is concerned with basic problems related to how and why people use alcohol, the effects of alcohol on the normal ways of dealing with problems, and the kinds of emotional disturbances involved in the detrimental use of alcohol. The Department heartily endorses the program of the National Council on Alcoholism [and Drug Dependence] because of its farsighted emphasis on research on alcoholism and on the whole range of factors involved in the normal and abnormal use of alcohol.”
  • Arthur S. Flemming
    Secretary, US Department of Health, Education, and Welfare

“The National Council on Alcoholism [and Drug Dependence] is dedicated to mobilizing the citizens of this country for action. Its carefully developed and directed program as America’s only national agency for alcoholism deserves the enthusiastic, moral, and financial support of business and industrial leaders everywhere.”
  • James F. Oates, Jr.
    Chairman of the Board and President, Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United States
“The burden of alcoholism can weigh heavily upon the working family. This has been long recognized by the American Federation of Labor and the Congress of Industrial Organizations. It is fitting, then, that the labor movement pledge support to the National Council on Alcoholism [and Drug Dependence] for its continuing assistance in developing an educational program for union members. We shall cooperate fully with religious, civic and industrial groups to encourage the expansion of the NCA[DD] program and the establishment of affiliates to bring help and treatment to every American community.”
  • Joseph A Beirne
    Chairman, AFL-CIO Community Services Committee
    President, Communication Workers of America

“The ultimate solution to this problem of alcoholism is not going to be a single discipline. It is going to come from a combined psychiatric, physiological, and social approach to the total problem. I heartily endorse the program of the National Council on Alcoholism [and Drug Dependence] in bringing all these disciplines to bear in its study and attack on the problems of alcoholism.”
  • Howard A. Rusk, MD
    Director, Institute of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation of New York University-Bellevue Hospital

“The National Council on Alcoholism [and Drug Dependence] is succeeding nobly in its appointed mission of having alcoholism accepted as a disease and the alcoholic as a person who can be and is worth saving. This is truly God’s work in which NCA[DD], its staff and its affiliates can take justifiable pride.”
  • Dr. Norman Vincent Peale
    Minister of Marble Collegiate Church

 
 
 SOME CURRENT THOUGHTS ON NCADD
“Change starts with information and having experience with people in recovery. NCADD modeled that long before it became popular. In this coming of age of alcoholism and addiction as a public health disorder, we would be wise to apply the lessons of NCADD’s early experience and encourage more people to come out for recovery and provide more foundation support for the good works of people who give back every day beyond measure.”
  • Andrea Barthwell, MD
    Office of Demand Reduction
    White House Office of National Drug Control Policy

“NCADD is a testament to what an organized citizenry can do to address a serious personal and public health problem. Since 1944, NCADD has served as the leading force in public policy advocacy related to alcoholism and drug dependence, bringing help and hope to local communities throughout America.”
  • William L. White
    Author, “Slaying the Dragon: The History of Addiction Treatment and Recovery in America”

“I commend NCADD for its distinguished history on working to reduce the stigma of alcoholism and barriers to treatment. NIAAA and NCADD have long been allies, dating back to 1970 when NCA (as NCADD was then known) and its members played key roles in passing legislation that created NIAAA. NCADD continues to be a prominent voice in raising awareness about the science of addiction by partnering with national organizations on significant projects and by disseminating research-based information. As NCADD approaches its 60th anniversary in 2004, NIAAA salutes its years of dedicated service.”
  • Ting-Kai Li, MD
    Director
    National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism




NCADD logo - National Council on Alcoholism and Drug Dependence
 National Council on Alcoholism and Drug Dependence, Inc.
244 East 58th Street, 4th Floor, New York, NY 10022
phone: 212/269-7797   fax: 212/269-7510
email: national@ncadd.org   http://www.ncadd.org
HOPE LINE: 800/NCA-CALL (24-hour Affiliate referral)