All Kinds of Hot Dogs 100%BEEF •NITRITE FREE -TOFU • CHICKEN -FOOTLONGS plus Home-Baked Roaat Beef Sandwiches and... the Best (really 1)... Potato Salad ft Coleslaw Swanky Frank Northwestern School of Law of Lewis & Clark College Portland, Oregon Invites You to Meet: Martha Spence, Associate Dean, who will be on campus to answer your questions about: • A generous merit scholarship program, the Dean's Fellowship for Excellence • Our nationally known program in natural resources and environmental * law • Externship opportunities • An international business law specialty that is part of an aire solid business curriculum • Career opportunities in public and private law University of Oregon Prelaw Club Prelaw Advising, 164 Oregon Ha December 1,1993, 4:00 p.m. to 5:00 p.m. please stop By iaXk % OWN" ^ Imported & Domestic wine & Beer Large variety of international Foods Over 150 domestic & Imported cheeses Mon-Sat. M Sundays 10-5 % Located ontttc corner of 11ttl l Olive l/IX/A 54>-m,M> ] he IV I V/V l 2 ”> VV. I 1 th Av filin' It (,|S| MIOUMinw S\H KM I ()()l) SI ()Kl M\( I Workplace drug use declines WASHINGTON (AP) — Drug use a t work is declining, but the reasons are not ye! dear, feder al researchers said Monday There is not enough evidence to attribute the change to more drug testing of workers, a shift in attitude toward drug use or other factors, said Charles P. O'Brien, head of psychiatry at the Vet erans Affairs Medical Center and chairman of a com mittee of the National Research Council and Insti tute of Medicine The deterrent effects of drug testing never have been clearly demonstrated, the committee said It called for more comprehensive studies and better evaluation of programs aimed at creating a drug free workplace. "Clearly workers entering the workforce in the 1990s are likely to have substantially less experi ence with illicit drugs than did their counterparts in the 1980s and the lote 1970s." the committee said. The committee mi id a 1990 survey indicates that abuse rates in the work|>lm e an- now relatively low. The survey found that about 7 percent of U S. workers used an illegal drug during the preceding month and nlnnil 6 percent abused alc ohol, A 1979 study showed that as many as H percent of the general (copulation had used one or more ille gal drugs during the prec eding month Businesses ought to do a tietter )ob determining what works in c hecking drug abuse, and studies also should focus on whether occasional drug use affec ts productivity, he said The committee also said that nearly SI i! billion is sjMMit annually on urinalysis tests of workers But there is not much scientific, evidence to show the tests are very good at detecting drug use or depen dence. Fur example, said Marian Fisc liman of Columbia University, traces of marijuana can !>e found in urine uClearly workers enU workforce in the 1990s ere likely to have substantially less experience with illicit drugs...” National Resource Council and Institute of Medicine even months after use. There is no scientific proof that such amounts would affect behavior, she said. Added Bryan Finkle of the University of Utah, urine testing "tells you a very limited amount. It doesn't distinguish between use and abuse The test results have been over-interpreted, pri marily by lawyers and crime-fighters, he said. The committee also found that on-the-job drug intervention programs may have limited value, in part because they do not include systematic follow up. "Recovery should be viewed as a process rather than an event." the committee said. It said most drug and alcohol intervention pro grams have focused on rinding now cases of abuse and have "devoted little time to relapse preven tion." "Workplace alcohol and other drug interventions may help a limited number of patients” but cannot by themselves "solve the nation's problems with alcohol and other drugs," the committee said. A separate study released last month by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation said abuse of alcohol, tobacco and drugs is killing more than 500.000 Americans a year and placing an increasing burden on the health care system and society. Millions with bad teeth can’t afford dentists WASHINGTON (AP) — Mil lions of Americans with rotting teeth and other oral diseases i an t afford to see the dentist, the government reported Mon day. Americans' overall oral health has improved dramatically with the advent of fluoride and better dental education, said the report by the Public Health Service. But minorities, the poor and the elderly still have too many cavities, untreated and decaying teeth and diseases from gin givitis to oral cancer, the service concluded. "It's a rather stark compari son," said Dr Robert Collins, the service's chief dental officer "About 150 million people do not have dental insurance ... and very little is provided by the government to the poor." More than half of children ages five to 17 have cavities, the report said. A fourth of them — mostly minorities plus the poor and those whose parents didn't fin ish high school —get 75 percent of the cavities. Ninety-one per cent of Indian and Eskimo chil dren have at least one by age 15. making them the most affected group. About 12 percent of white children have decayed teeth, compared with 27.2 percent of minorities; less than 1 percent o! white children lost> teeth by age 17, compared with 3.2 percent of minorities; and only 69.6 per cent of minority children get cavities filled, compared with 87.5 percent of white children. Adults fare no better About 7 percent of white Americans have decayed teeth, compared with 22 percent of hlai k Ameri cans. Ninety-three percent of whites had their cavities filled, compared with 78 percent of blacks In 1989. about 7.2 million Americans ages 18 to 64 had lost all of their teeth And last year, doctors diagnosed 30,000 new coses of oral cancer, which killed 8,000 people. The main problem is cost, the health service concluded Amer icans pay 56 percent of their dental bills out of pocket, com pared with only 19 percent of doctor bills. President Bill Clinton’s health care package would provide general dental core, including preventive services, for chil dren. Adults would be added to the program later That would help gut people to the dentist regularly and cut costs. Collins said. For example, coating chil dren's teeth with sealants pre vents 90 percent of cavities in mo pus oi moir teem inr .moui $21 a tooth. The government wants half of all children to get this sealant hy the year 2000. but only 10.0 percent have it now, tilt) report said. Now. Medicaid spends less than 1 percent of its $77 billion budget on dental bills for the poor, the health service report ed. Only 20 percent of Medicaid eligible children receive dental services, mainly because few dentists agree to the low Medi caid fees. Collins said. More than 99 percent of el derly Americans have dental problems, yet only IS percent have private insurance, and Medicare covers no dental bills, the report said. The American Dental Associ ation wants Medicare reformed to cover dental bills. Under the Clinton plan, the elderly even tually would be covered if they chose not to retain Medicare. "These people need oral care, too," said ADA executive direc tor Dr. John S. Zapp. But finances aren't the only obstacle. Collins said. The study found black children with insur ance had fewer dental visits — 1.6 per child per year — than uninsured white children, two visits per child Right Here On Campus! 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