Hope UK raising drugs awareness

Hope UK supporters gathered in central London on Wednesday to hear about the charity’s three-year Government funded Family Drug Prevention project.

The project, which ran from April 2006 to March 2009, saw Hope UK partner with Care for the Family’s ‘How to Drug Proof Your Kids’ course in bringing drug education and training to parents, teachers and professionals working with drug or alcohol abusers and their families.

Over the course of the three years, more than 470 talks were given by Hope UK volunteer educators to parents and other family members in the community, reaching 10,500 people with drug awareness education.

In a final evaluation published last December, the Charities Evaluation Services found that 99 per cent of people who had provided feedback on the talks rated them as good or excellent, and three-quarters of the 325 parents to give feedback said the talks had increased their awareness of drug issues. Parents also generally agreed they were better equipped to tackle drugs and alcohol issues.

Paul Coppeard, Hope UK’s Parents’ Project Worker, told the conference of how teachers had contacted Hope UK to have educators speak at their school after they found out drugs were being sold outside their school gates.

Many teachers, he said, needed help in knowing who to contact and how to respond if they spotted a child in school taking drugs. In another instance, he said London City Mission had Hope UK educators spend the day training its workers to help them spot drug abusers in their projects.

“It just opens your eyes to things you might have ignored because you didn’t know what you were looking at,” said Mr Coppeard.

Andrew Brown, Coordinator of the Drug Education Forum, reaffirmed the recent statement from the Chief Medical Officer, that an alcohol-free childhood is best.

“It was a bold statement because it jars with many young people’s views and many parents’ views about when we should introduce alcohol into the lives of young people,” he said.

Sarah Brighton, Hope UK’s Deputy Director, said it was “startling” how little help there was for the relatives of drug and alcohol abusers, citing the example of three sisters she had encountered, none of whom had received any support in coping with their father’s alcoholism.

All vulnerable children needed, she said, was “good support, discipline, a good education, and a good adult to just to take a little time to steer them and help them choose a slightly different course”.
News
The first Christmas song to be sung in churches
The first Christmas song to be sung in churches

Every Christmas, people sing the song “While Shepherds Watched Their Flocks by Night”. Unlike many other songs and carols that include elements of non-biblical tradition and myth, this song is pure Scripture. It was the first Christmas song authorised to be sung in the Church of England. This is the story …

The story of the Christmas Truce of 1914
The story of the Christmas Truce of 1914

On Christmas Eve in 1914, many men were in the trenches fighting the war, but the spirit of Christmas halted the conflict for a brief period. This is the story …

Report highlights injustices experienced by Christians in the Holy Land
Report highlights injustices experienced by Christians in the Holy Land

Jerusalem Church leaders have released a report detailing the struggles and challenges currently faced be Christians living in the Holy Land.

Have you lost the wonder of Christmas?
Have you lost the wonder of Christmas?

For you who have been followers of Jesus Christ for a long time, maybe the pain and suffering of this world and the darkness you have had to live through this past year has gotten you down to the point of complete and utter discouragement. But all is not lost.