“Fight
Methamphetamine With Action, Not Ads,” urges Levit
Released on
= September 21, 2005, 2:08 pm
Press Release
Author = Mark Levit/Partners & Levit Inc.
Industry = Advertising
Press Release
Summary = Our nation’s latest drug epidemic has infected every
state, city, and town. Methamphetamine use is rampant with no sign
of easing, making it the subject of the next ONDCP (Office of National
Drug Control Policy) campaign.
Press Release
Body = Our nation’s latest drug epidemic has infected every
state, city, and town. Methamphetamine use is rampant with no sign
of easing, making it the subject of the next ONDCP (Office of National
Drug Control Policy) campaign. If this campaign follows the same
strategy its predecessors, meth use will continue to increase. “Previous
anti-drug campaigns such as ‘This is your brain…’
and ‘Just Say No,’ were memorable but ineffective,”
according to Partners & Levit’s managing partner, Mark
Levit.
Advertising
is used to create awareness or elicit a behavior, like trying a
new product. Anti-drug campaigns have been unsuccessful because
they tell the audience not to do something. Advertising is effective
in encouraging or sustaining behaviors, not discouraging them. That’s
only the beginning of the problem.
Research has
indicated such advertisements arouse curiosity about the very drugs
the advertiser warns against. “Viewers that have had no history
of drug use nor inclination to use, are being introduced to drugs
by public service announcements. The Feds don’t take into
account the rebelliousness of youth. It’s like being tempted
with forbidden fruit,” said Levit.
The government
has options other than advertising. “A grassroots campaign,
much like the Truth.com campaign against tobacco, which was a huge
success, may help curb the problem. All marketing professionals
know the best way to communicate a message to young people is through
buzz marketing. A network of peers with social appeal to inform
youngsters of the dangers of methamphetamine would serve to discourage
drug use,” Levit added.
Meth use is
unlike any other drug epidemic this country has seen; it’s
not smuggled into our borders, it’s manufactured in our homes.
Meth can easily be made from common over the counter cold and allergy
medications, making the drug highly accessible. Clandestine laboratories
turn these medications into a powerful and addictive central nervous
stimulant.
In a span of
five years, the ONDCP has spent $929 million of taxpayer dollars
on anti-drug advertising, with no results. John Walters, drug czar
of the ONDCP admitted in a 2002 Wall Street Journal interview, “This
campaign isn’t reducing drug use… it hasn’t had
an effect on young people’s abuse.” Periodic reviews
and pre-testing have proven their ineffectiveness, yet they’ve
still aired.
Tackling a drug
problem like meth will never be an easy task and creating awareness
through advertising is just that—creating awareness; making
the problem known but not delivering a solution. The Feds should
take heed and spend the drug budget in ways that would reduce the
problem, perhaps tougher drug laws for the traffickers including
enforcement and peer networks for prevention. “Taxpayer money
should be used for programs that work, especially when it comes
to drug prevention. Problems afflicting youth are problems of the
nation, not just a segregated community. They’re the future
and we should invest in them,” Levit concluded.
Partners &
Levit Inc. is an aggressive New York advertising agency. Clients
include UnitedHealth Group, GE Commercial Finance, and Procter &
Gamble. The agency's heritage dates from 1981. For more information
about Partners & Levit, visit [url
Web Site = http://www.partnerslevit.com
Contact Details
= Mark Levit
Partners & Levit Inc.
49 West Street
New York, NY 10006
tel: 212-696-1200
www.partnerslevit.com
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