Educating and supporting young people and their families on drug addiction prevention, mental health and available treatments.
Join us in fighting against drug addiction and for mental health
100% of proceeds go toward drug addiction awareness and prevention
(Alan II's Legacy Charity & College of Charleston Collegiate Recovery Program)
Register for Alan II’s Legacy Golf Invitational
Monday, May 19
Breakfast
Golf Tournament
Post-Tournament Reception
Silent Auction
Secure your spot by registering today!
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The Stats
100k Overdoses for 3 Years
2023: 112k Overdoses
In 2023, the overdose rate topped 112,000 in a 12 month period for the first time (Center for Disease Control and Prevention)
27.2M with Drug Disorders
In 2022, about 27.2 million Americans (15 million males; 12.2 million females) age 12 and older reported battling a drug use disorder in the past year (United States National Survey on Drug Use and Heath)
21.5M with Dual Disorders
In 2022, 21.5 million American adults (8.4%) suffered from both a mental health disorder and a substance use disorder, or co-occurring disorders, in the past year (United States National Survey on Drug Use and Health)
1.1M Overdose Deaths
Since 2000, 1.1 million people have fatally overdosed in the United States (Health)
42% Know Overdose Victim
42% of US adults said they have known someone who died from drug overdose (Rand Corporation)
32% Lost to Overdose
A nationally representative survey of more than 2,300 Americans, fielded in spring 2023, suggests that 32 percent of the U.S. adult population, or an estimated 82.7 million individuals, has lost someone they know to a fatal drug overdose. For nearly one-fifth of survey respondents—18.9 percent, representing an estimated 48.9 million adults—the person they knew who died of overdose was a family member or close friend. (JAMA Health Forum)
70% Synthetic Opioid Deaths
Fentanyl and other synthetic opioids are involved in nearly 70% of overdose deaths (CDC)
Fentanyl's Deadly Potency
Fentanyl is up to 50 times more potent than heroin and 100 times more potent than morphine and can be deadly even in small doses, according to the CDC. Other drugs may be laced with deadly levels of fentanyl, and a user is not able to see it, taste it, or smell it.