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News (Media Awareness Project) - US AZ: State Launches Anti-Meth Drive
Title:US AZ: State Launches Anti-Meth Drive
Published On:2007-04-15
Source:East Valley Tribune (AZ)
Fetched On:2008-01-12 08:07:04
STATE LAUNCHES ANTI-METH DRIVE

Scottsdale middle school students will get a sneak peek at a
statewide anti-methamphetamine campaign Tuesday designed to scare
them straight.

Arizona Attorney General Terry Goddard and Maricopa County
Supervisors Chairman Don Stapley, R-District 2 of Mesa, Gilbert and
Scottsdale, will be at Cocopah Middle School to unveil the Arizona
Meth Project advertisements the day before the campaign's official
launch on Wednesday. They'll also talk to about 30 students about the
drug.

Arizona's campaign is patterned after the Montana Meth Project
launched in September 2005. Arizona will use the same television ads
aired in Montana, which feature dramatizations of meth's effects,
said Linda Mushkatel, special projects manager for Maricopa County.

The campaign features several ads including a young girl in a
hospital emergency room and other spots showing users with open sores
on their mouths or teeth.

"They're gritty. They're not pleasant to watch," said Andrea Esquer,
spokeswoman for Goddard's office. "There was some forethought. How do
you get these kids' attention to get them to understand what using
meth even once will do?"

Arizona print ads, billboards and a Web site also will be similar to
the Montana products, seen at www.montanameth.org, Mushkatel said.

There also will be a series of radio commercials -- some in English,
some in Spanish -- that will feature real Arizona youths sharing
their experiences with meth.

The Montana campaign first caught Goddard's attention in February
2006, when that state's attorney general spoke at an Arizona meth
conference, Esquer said. This campaign is impressive because it
included a baseline survey to determine what kids knew about meth and
whether the ads were effective over time, Esquer said.

Cocopah was picked to unveil the campaign because it's a typical
school, representative that meth use happens everywhere, Mushkatel
said.

"When we talk about drug use, there's some thought that it only
happens in certain parts of the city," Mushkatel said.

She pointed to the Arizona Criminal Justice Commission's 2006 Arizona
Youth Survey to show that theory isn't true. According to those
numbers, 4.3 percent of eighth-, 10th- and 12th-graders have tried
meth.

There were 1,412 meth production-related raids across the state
between 2000 and 2005, figures from the attorney general's office
show.
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