Hope And Healing Documentary To Premiere On April 23, 2024

“Hope and Healing: A Discussion with West Virginia Youth” is a collaboration between West Virginia Public Broadcasting and the West Virginia Drug Intervention Institute (WVDII). Youth from West Virginia gathered for the project to talk about issues they face on topics including substance use disorder, bullying, social media, and mental health. The project will be screened on Tuesday, April 23, at 5:30 p.m. at the University of Charleston’s Geary Auditorium. The screening is free and open to the public.

An eye-opening documentary illuminating teen struggles presented by West Virginia Public Broadcasting and the West Virginia Drug Intervention Institute

Charleston, WV – (April 1, 2024) – A video project with West Virginia youth talking about issues they face, ranging from social media to substance use disorder, will premiere at a public screening in April at the University of Charleston.

“Hope and Healing: A Discussion with West Virginia Youth” is a collaboration between West Virginia Public Broadcasting and the West Virginia Drug Intervention Institute (WVDII). Youth from West Virginia gathered for the project to talk about issues they face on topics including substance use disorder, bullying, social media, and mental health. The project will be screened on Tuesday, April 23, at 5:30 p.m. at the University of Charleston’s Geary Auditorium. The screening is free and open to the public.

The project will broadcast statewide on WVPB Television on Monday, April 29, at 9 p.m. and will be available on all WVPB’s streaming platforms, including the PBS App, YouTube, and at wvpublic.org.

“These teens had very open and honest conversations about their struggles and of those around them to educate other teenagers and adults better,” said Heather McDaniel, WVDII’s vice president.

Filmed at the University of Charleston’s new downtown innovation center, the project underscores the importance of listening to youth voices and understanding their perspectives. It features candid discussions with middle and high school students in West Virginia. The youths express what they wish adults knew about navigating life in today’s world, from discussing their encounters in schools to offering advice on effective communication and prevention strategies. The participants engage in a thought-provoking roundtable discussion aimed at fostering empathy and awareness.

“We believe ‘Hope and Healing’ has the power to spark important conversations and drive positive change in our communities,” said Maggie Holley, WVPB’s director of Education.

The WVPB Education Department and the WVDII encourage guidance counselors in school systems throughout the state to use this video and accompanying activities as a resource.

Those interested in attending the screening at the University of Charleston on April 23 should RSVP to rhiannon@wvdii.org.

For more information about the West Virginia Drug Intervention Institute, contact President Susan Bissett at susan@wvdii.org or Vice President Heather McDaniel at heather@wvdii.org.

For more information about West Virginia Public Broadcasting’s education programs, contact education@wvpublic.org.

Watch the promotional trailer for Hope and Healing using this link or click below.

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About the West Virginia Drug Intervention Institute

Located in Charleston, West Virginia, the mission of the Drug Intervention Institute is to reduce opioid and drug-related deaths in Appalachia and the nation by (a) preventing substance use through education (b) reducing overdose through training and distribution related to naloxone and other opioid reversal agents, and (c) supporting harm reduction and other drug-response efforts.

About West Virginia Public Broadcasting

West Virginia Public Broadcasting is dedicated to Telling West Virginia’s Story through its state radio and television network and online platforms. WVPB’s mission is to educate, inform and inspire the people of West Virginia. WVPB is the Mountain State’s only source for national NPR and PBS programming.

2 Private W.Va. Schools Will Require Student Vaccination

At least a couple of private West Virginia schools are requiring students to be vaccinated against COVID-19 this fall.

The University of Charleston and Bethany College both say vaccinations will be required for the upcoming school year.

University of Charleston President Marty Roth told news outlets that it is the school’s responsibility to provide a healthy environment for the 1,500 students expected at the Charleston campus and 200 at the Beckley campus. The way to do that is to require students to be vaccinated, he said.

Students at the university won’t have to wear masks, but 3 feet of social distancing will be required in classrooms and public spaces, Roth said.

Bethany College’s vaccination requirement was decided by the college’s Pandemic Response Team in accordance with Centers for Disease Control guidance, the school said.

“I applaud our community for its commitment to protecting one another, and I believe strongly that our decision to require the vaccine will maximize the Bethany experience even more,” Bethany President Tamara Nichols Rodenberg said in an email announcing the update.

Folk Medicines Examined In New Book

Appalachian lore often includes medicines made from plants and herbs to cure ailments. A new book by Rebecca Linger and Dennis K. Flaherty examines the components of some of those traditional herbs to see just what effect they have and determine how best to use them.

Rebecca Linger and Dennis Flaherty were both on the faculty of the University of Charleston School of Pharmacy. Both have an interest in medicinal plants but from different perspectives. Dr. Linger teaches graduate courses in ethnobotany and was interested in the chemistry and pharmacology of medicinal plants. Dr. Flaherty, who is now retired, taught graduate toxicology courses and approached the book project from a human toxicology perspective.

The book is titled “A Guide to the Toxicology of Select Medicinal Plants and Herbs of Eastern North America.” Eric Douglas spoke with Linger to understand the history behind these medicines.

This interview has been lightly edited for clarity.

Douglas: Explain to me the interest in herbal medicine and the medicinal properties. Where did that come from?

Linger: I was born in southern Ohio, and my mother’s people come from Adams County, Ohio. My grandmother was someone who pretty much doctored the family and herself and she had some very interesting remedies that she would use on her children. When I was little, I was always getting canker sores, which now that I’m older, I recognize that it’s because I had a thiamin deficiency. My grandma had this little tin of yellow root powder. And she would always give me a little bit of that in a plastic bag and say “Take this home, lick your finger, tap it on the powder and put it on your sores whenever you get a canker sore.” And when I used that stuff, it’s bitter. Being a four- or five-year-old kid, doctoring yourself with an herbal medicine was really, really tough. But I did it because the canker sore would be gone in a day. And if you’ve ever had any kind of mouth sores you know it’s really, really painful. So I trusted it, and it worked great.

Douglas: How did people learn this stuff? Where did that knowledge come from in the first place?

Linger: The answer is that if you look back in recorded history, there have been many medical texts that have been written in all cultures. So the Chinese had the Yellow Emperor’s book of medicine. That actually encompasses many, many different fields. But if you think all the way back to primitive man before recorded history, you’d have to figure that there were observational things. “Is this plant edible? Well, let me eat a little bit of it. Oh, it’s edible. It’s bitter. But it didn’t really make me sick. And it actually helped with something.” The other thing is that the observation of what plants animals ate helped early man to recognize what was there.

But in terms of what plants have medicinal properties, it really was kind of a trial and error that you would have this idea that “Well, let me try this and see if this helps with this problem.”

I do want to point out that there was a Neanderthal grave that was discovered in Germany. And when they excavated it, they noticed that the body covered with a lot of medicinal plants. They thought it was a Neanderthal burial practice. But when they really looked at the flowers in the grave, every single one of them had strong medicinal properties. And so maybe the Neanderthals recognized medicinal properties.

Douglas: For the book, you’ve taken these oral traditions of medicines, but then you break down the chemical properties. As a scientist, what was your thought about this? Were you skeptical? Or were you? “Hey, I know from personal experience this stuff works?”

Linger: There are herbal books that have been written that basically will talk about all the plants that have been historically used as medicine. I did have a certain level of skepticism. It’s like, “Is that really true?” One of the plants out there that has an ascribed medicinal property to it, but there’s nothing in science to support is maidenhair fern. It’s supposed to help you grow a thick head of hair. There’s nothing in it.

After World War II, the United States government shifted its focus from implements of war to implements of health. The National Cancer Institute was founded from that. And one of the processes that scientists there advocated to academics across the country was to find new cures for cancer. The academics went back to the herbals. From that process, we got the mayapple, which is a beautiful spring flower. The fruit is edible, the rest of the plant is incredibly toxic, because it stops your cells from dividing. And so from that we got two chemotherapies that are still in use today. And they’re very, very effective.

The book will allow you to learn how to dose yourself with medicinal plants. But it will also give you the caution that don’t use too much of it, this is the recommended dose, don’t go over this. And this is how it will interact with the organ systems in your body. If you take too much of it, it could harm your liver or your kidneys. Some of them are going to cause your heart to have issues.

Douglas: Were there any big surprises when you jumped into this research?

Linger: I talked about the horse chestnut. I was born in southern Ohio so the buckeye tree is, of course, near and dear to my heart. I was always raised that buckeyes were poisonous, but I would see half-eaten buckeyes in the field. My uncle always teased me that only the squirrel knows which half of the buckeye is not poisonous.

You can use the buckeye as medicine, you can make a tincture out of it, or a tea out of it, and use very, very small amounts of it. And it will actually help with stomach complaints and so forth. It’ll help with inflammation. So it will help a little bit with your arthritis. One of the folktales that I’d always heard was to carry a buckeye in your pocket and you’d never have joint pain.

Douglas: Today, you hear a lot about essential oils and that sort of thing. Is that an extension today of this kind of medicine?

Linger: Definitely. A lot of medicinal properties of plants are in the oils of the plant itself. I’ll give the example of pine oil. It can disrupt some of the pain signaling in your body so that it will alleviate pain and inflammation. There is some truth to that. Smelling lavender oil is relaxing. Cedar wood and sage oil can be very relaxing, too.

But you have to be careful with essential oils because they’re so strong. There are some that are really, really toxic.

One thing about it that needs to be said is that if you are infusing essential oils in your household, be aware of the pets that you have because especially cats aren’t able to metabolize the essential oils and they’ll build up in the system. Essential oils can be toxic to your pets.

“A Guide to the Toxicology of Select Medicinal Plants and Herbs of Eastern North America” is available in Charleston at Taylor Books, the Capitol Market and the gift shop at Kanawha State Forest. It is also available on Amazon.

This story is part of a series of interviews with authors from, or writing about, Appalachia.

September 11, 1935: Morris Harvey College Relocates to Charleston

On September 11, 1935, Morris Harvey College relocated from Barboursville to Charleston. Founded in 1888 by the Methodist Episcopal Church South, the school was originally known as Barboursville Seminary. The seminary struggled financially until Fayetteville coal operator Morris Harvey paid off the school’s debt. In appreciation, the institution changed its name to Morris Harvey College.

By the 1930s, the school was again in debt. Dr. Leonard Riggleman pushed to move the college to Charleston, where it affiliated with Kanawha Junior College and Mason College of Music and Fine Arts. In 1941, Morris Harvey broke from the Methodist Church, becoming an independent college.

During World War II, Riggleman acquired a permanent campus—located across the Kanawha River from the state capitol. By the time he retired as college president in 1964, enrollment had surpassed 3,000. The next decade, however, brought more financial woes. In 1978, new President Thomas Voss dismissed faculty and renamed the school the University of Charleston—with little positive effect.

Over the last quarter-century, though, fortunes have turned around under President Edwin Welch, with the university adding new buildings and a school of pharmacy.

State Seeks Public Input On Plan To Address Drug Addiction Crisis

A group of state leaders working on a three-year plan to address substance use in West Virginia are traveling the state to share what they’ve come up with, and they say they need help deciding which issues to address first, and how. 

“Because we want to get this right,” said Brian Gallagher, chairman of the Governor’s Council on Substance Abuse Prevention and Treatment. “If we do this wrong, we run the risk of putting a lot of money, and training and time into solutions that aren’t real solutions, aren’t evidence-based.”

The West Virginia Substance Use Response Plan consists of six areas for improvement, covering everything Gallagher said his group could think of when contemplating ways addiction has negatively affected the state. That includes obvious areas, like prevention and treatment, but it also highlights where substance use disorder is most on display, like the legal system and communities that lack opportunities for employment, while calling for ways communities and their leaders can facilitate more longer-lasting recoveries for residents who are recovering from addiction. 

The state aims to complete the plan by Jan. 1, 2020, according to Bob Hansen, executive director of the state’s Office of Drug Control Policy. That way, he said, lawmakers can take over implementation of the plan during the next legislative session, which begins Jan. 8, 2020. 

The ODCP was created as a sub-department of the West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources in 2017 by legislative action. Hansen was appointed by Gov. Jim Justice to lead the office in late 2018, around the same time Justice’s office announced it was creating the aforementioned council on preventing and treating substance abuse.

Hansen said it’s not like the state has been idly standing by since then. 

“Oh, there’s been a whole lot of activities,” he said Monday at a public forum at the University of Charleston. His list of actions includes the recently unveiled Jobs and Hope program, which Hansen said has been working with people in recovery since this summer to connect them with meaningful employment, and the state’s quick response team initiative, which equips a team of first responders to handle overdoses. 

“[There’s been a] growth in residential treatment, there’s been a growth in outpatient practice, there’s been a growth in peer recovery support,” Hansen said. “We’re doing a lot of things automatically as we grow along. We’re not sitting just waiting to plan, we’re implementing tons of activities that will have a long-term impact for people.”

Hansen, Gallagher and others will be in Martinsburg on Tuesday, at the Berkeley County Sheriff’s office; Wheeling on Wednesday, at the Swint Hall Troy Theater; and Fairmont on Thursday, at the Robert H. Mollohan Research Center. The forums begin a 4:30 p.m.

The public has until Friday, Oct. 25, to share their feedback either in person or online.

University of Charleston Selects New President

The University of Charleston has chosen a university dean from Connecticut to succeed President Edwin Welch when he retires at the end of June.

According to the university, Martin Roth is currently dean of the Barney School of Business at the University of Hartford.

A Pittsburgh native, he is the former chair of the International Business Department at the University of South Carolina.

His biography lists bachelor’s and master’s degrees in business and a Ph.D. in marketing and anthropology from the University of Pittsburgh.

Roth was selected after a six-month search.

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