Drug-Free Community Campaign

Choose health. Refuse the trap.

Tobacco, opioids, and meth can take control fast. This campaign puts clear facts, early action, and practical support in one place so families, students, and neighbors can protect each other.

Tobacco & Vaping

Nicotine addiction can begin quickly, especially with high-strength vape products and flavored tobacco.

  • Know that nicotine affects attention, mood, sleep, and heart health.
  • Keep smoke-free and vape-free spaces at home, school, work, and events.
  • Support quit attempts with encouragement, counseling, and trusted quitline help.

Opioids

Prescription pain pills, fentanyl, heroin, and counterfeit pills can cause overdose without warning.

  • Never share medication; store it locked and dispose of unused pills safely.
  • Learn overdose signs: slow breathing, blue lips, choking sounds, or no response.
  • Ask about naloxone access and call emergency services immediately for overdose.

Meth

Meth can rapidly harm sleep, judgment, dental health, mental health, and family stability.

  • Take warning signs seriously: long wake periods, paranoia, agitation, or sudden isolation.
  • Avoid shame-based conversations; focus on safety, honesty, and treatment support.
  • Connect people with medical care, counseling, recovery groups, and crisis support.

How to help today

Small actions matter before a crisis happens. Choose one step and make it normal.

Talk early
Lock medicines
Offer rides to care

When risk is immediate

  • Call 911 for overdose, poisoning, chest pain, severe confusion, or danger.
  • Call or text 988 for mental health crisis support in the United States.
  • Stay with the person when it is safe, keep them breathing, and follow dispatcher instructions.