CESAR: Center for Substance Abuse Research

CESAR Fax (1992 to 2015)

CESAR FAX provided a weekly, one-page overview of timely substance abuse trends or issues to more than 6,000 subscribers via email each Monday morning. Recipients included Federal and State policymakers; prevention specialists; treatment and health care providers; law enforcement officials; researchers and academicians; and media representatives.

By default, all available issues are displayed below, but you may select one option each from year, topic, drug and population to narrow your search.




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Date Volume/Issue Title
April 21, 2008 Volume 17 Issue 16 Drinking Drivers Involved in Fatal Crashes Four to Eight Times More Likely to Have a Prior DWI Conviction
April 14, 2008 Volume 17 Issue 15 Alcohol & Marijuana Have Highest Rates of Continued Use in the Year After Initiation; Heroin & Crack Cocaine Have Highest Rates of Dependence
April 7, 2008 Volume 17 Issue 14 One-Half of U.S. HIV/AIDS Cases Diagnosed in 2006 Were Transmitted Solely Through Male-to-Male Sexual Contact; 17% Related to Injection Drug Use
March 31, 2008 Volume 17 Issue 13 Percentage of Positive Employee Drug Tests Containing Marijuana and Cocaine Decreases; Opiates and Amphetamines Increases Over Past 10 Years
March 24, 2008 Volume 17 Issue 12 More Than One-Half a Million Adolescents Use Inhalants for the First Time Each Year; Commonly Available Products Most Likely to Be Used
March 17, 2008 Volume 17 Issue 11 FY2009 Proposed Federal Drug Budget Increases Media Campaign Funding by $40 Million; Decreases Safe and Drug-Free Schools State Grants by Nearly $195 Million
March 10, 2008 Volume 17 Issue 10 FY2009 Federal Drug Control Budget Released; Prevention Continues to Receive Dwindling Proportion of Funding
March 3, 2008 Volume 17 Issue 9 Youths Who Use Stimulants Nonmedically More Likely to Report Illicit Drug Use and Other Delinquent Behaviors
February 25, 2008 Volume 17 Issue 8 Early Non-Medical Prescription Drug Use Related to Lifetime Diagnosis of Prescription Drug Abuse and Dependence
February 18, 2008 Volume 17 Issue 7 Majority of Nonmedical Users of ADHD Medications Obtain the Drugs from Family or Friends; One-Fifth Obtain Fraudulently from a Doctor

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