• The Pulse of Resilience: Building Resilience from the Ground Up
    Jul 1 2026

    Two countries, two youth workers, one shared conviction: resilience isn't a luxury, it's a practice anyone can learn.


    This is a special multicast episode, recorded alongside our partners at the Unnecessary Harm podcast, built around this year's World Resiliency Week theme, "The Pulse of Resilience: Fall, Feel, Rise." Host Shane Varkow sits down with Adam Woods, coordinator of the Hope Tour in Australia, and Sneha Patiyathal, a youth prevention specialist in Kerala, India, and one of this year's World Resiliency Day global ambassadors.


    Adam and Sneha are two of the architects behind this year's global campaign, and they bring the view from the ground: what it actually looks like to walk alongside young people in two very different cultural contexts. They talk about the contagions unraveling kids in their communities, the quiet damage of absent parents, and the moment a young person hears "you matter" for the first time.


    If you work with young people, lead a coalition, or just want to understand what real resilience-building looks like outside a policy paper, this one will stay with you.

    Guest Bios

    Adam Woods coordinates the Hope Tour in Australia and is part of the Acts Global Church Network, a community organization helping people rebuild their lives with hope and reasonable grounds for it. He's one of the architects behind this year's World Resiliency Week campaign.


    Sneha Patiyathal is a youth prevention specialist and credentialed catalyst at the Fourth Wave Foundation in India. She has represented her organization at the United Nations in Vienna and the Asian Youth Forum on Drug Use Prevention, and serves as one of eight World Resiliency Day global ambassadors.


    • https://feeltherise.org/
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    1 hr and 3 mins
  • The Pulse of Resilience: Why Falling, Feeling, and Rising Matters
    Jun 24 2026

    This special multicast episode was originally recorded with our partners at the Dalgarno Institute and their podcast, Unnecessary Harm. As part of our ongoing collaboration around World Resiliency Week, we are excited to share this conversation with the Pathways to Prevention audience.


    Host Shane Varcoe sits down with World Resiliency Week planning team members Dave Closson and Jen Schneeman to explore the 2026 campaign theme - The Pulse of Resilience: Fall, Feel, Rise.


    Together, they unpack a powerful question: What if resilience isn't about pushing through, toughing it out, or simply "embracing the suck"?


    Drawing on lived experience, trauma recovery, prevention science, military service, nervous system research, and community-building, this conversation explores resilience as a rhythm rather than a destination. Dave and Jen share practical insights on burnout, healing, youth wellbeing, substance use prevention, and the importance of creating space for both struggle and growth.


    The result is a hopeful and deeply human conversation about how individuals and communities can develop the awareness, tools, and support systems needed to navigate adversity and emerge stronger.


    About World Resiliency Week

    World Resiliency Week is a global collaborative initiative bringing together prevention professionals, educators, researchers, community leaders, advocates, and lived-experience voices to strengthen resilience across individuals, families, and communities.


    The 2026 theme, The Pulse of Resilience: Fall, Feel, Rise, focuses on helping people recognize life's inevitable challenges, develop healthy ways to process them, and build the capacity to rise with greater awareness, connection, and strength.


    Get involved at: ⁠https://worldresiliencyweek.org/

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    52 mins
  • Creating a Culture Shift in Campus Drinking
    Apr 29 2026

    College drinking is often treated like an individual choice problem — “students just need to make better decisions.”


    In this episode, we zoom out and look at the bigger lever: culture and environment. Host Dave Closson is joined by Kate Lower (SHIFT, University of Texas at Austin) and Keyra Palacios (UT Austin student & SHIFT Maker) for a practical conversation about what prevention looks like when you center student experience, take environmental strategies seriously, and bring a harm reduction mindset into real campus life.


    You’ll hear:

    • What SHIFT is (in plain language) — and why culture change beats slogans
    • How campus and “game day” environments shape norms and expectations
    • Why “preventable measures” matter — and what they look like on the ground
    • Keyra’s perspective as an economics major (not a public health major) doing prevention work
    • A real-world story that captures the SHIFT mindset: bringing a first-aid kit to a party
    • Why health communication is hard — especially when students and powerful stakeholders have competing incentives
    • Takeaways for prevention leaders, campuses, and studentsVisit: https://shift.utexas.edu/
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    1 hr and 7 mins
  • Prevention Gone Wrong: The Do’s, Don’ts, and the Common-Sense Lessons in Drug Prevention
    Mar 25 2026

    Most people in prevention care deeply… that’s not the issue. The issue is that some of the most common prevention approaches can quietly miss the mark… and sometimes even backfire.


    In this episode of Pathways 2 Prevention, Dave Closson sits down with Matej (UTRIP), author of Prevention Gone Wrong: The Do’s, Don’ts, and the Common-Sense Lessons in Drug Prevention, to unpack why “good intentions” aren’t enough — and how to course‑correct without shaming the field.


    Episode Links:

    • UNODC International Standards on Drug Use Prevention (PDF): https://www.unodc.org/documents/prevention/standards_180412.pdf
    • Book: Prevention Gone Wrong: The Do’s, Don’ts, and the Common-Sense Lessons in Drug Prevention

    Drug Free America Foundation:

    • Website: https://www.dfaf.org/
    • Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/DrugFreeAmericaFndn/
    • Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/drugfreeamericafoundation/
    • YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCg9f7kHutH1xAFO_ZIRPmrg
    • X / Twitter: https://twitter.com/drugfreeamerica
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    1 hr and 12 mins
  • From Peer Educator to Prevention Leader: Experience as Your Superpower
    Feb 25 2026

    In this episode of Pathways to Prevention, we explore prevention leadership from a different angle — lived experience that doesn’t come from a degree program, but from doing the work, showing up, and growing through real-world practice.


    Dave sits down with Emily Parsons, Assistant Director of Health Promotion at the University of Tampa, to talk about her journey from student peer educator to campus prevention leader. Together, they unpack imposter syndrome, non-traditional career paths, mentorship, creativity in prevention work, and why experience and passion often matter just as much as credentials.


    This conversation is especially meaningful for anyone who has ever looked at a job description and thought, “I’m not sure I fit that box” — yet continues to lead, serve, and make an impact anyway.


    You’ll hear practical insights on developing student leaders, supervising with curiosity, building confidence, and creating meaningful prevention programming in higher education settings.

    Key themes in this episode include:

    • Prevention careers that start outside public health degrees

    • Mentorship and being seen for your potential

    • Leading with curiosity instead of having all the answers

    • Turning imposter syndrome into growth

    • Why creativity and connection drive student engagement

    • Supporting staff and students through development conversations

    • Letting experience — not just credentials — shape leadership


    If you work in prevention, higher education, student wellness, or coalition leadership, this episode offers practical encouragement and grounded wisdom you can apply right away.

    Subscribe and share with a colleague who is growing into their leadership voice.


    Learn more and explore resources at dfaf.org

    Drug Free America Foundation Links:

    • Website
    • Facebook
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
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    Not Yet Known
  • Where Grief, Maternal Health, and Prevention Meet: A Conversation with Mai Waller
    Jan 28 2026

    When we talk about prevention, most people think about youth programs, policy change, or school-based education. But prevention also starts in a hospital room, in a living room at 3 a.m. when a parent wonders, “Is this normal?”, and in the quiet after pregnancy or infant loss when families are left to figure out what comes next—often alone.

    In this episode of Pathways 2 Prevention, Dave sits down with Mai (Maiye) Waller, founder and executive director of the Mace Anthony Williamson Foundation and leader of The Doula Project Resource. Out of the preventable loss of her son, Mace Anthony, Mai chose to become the resource she always wished existed for other families.

    Together, they explore how community-based doulas, grief-informed care, and culturally grounded support before, during, and after pregnancy are powerful forms of substance use prevention, mental health promotion, and family strengthening.

    In this episode, we cover:

    • Mai’s journey from grieving mom to founder and executive director of a national nonprofit

    • What a doula really is (and is not)

    • How The Doula Project supports families before, during, and long after birth

    • Why a 3 a.m. “Is this normal?” text is prevention work

    • How grief, trauma, racism, and isolation increase risk for substance use and mental health challenges

    • The role of culturally grounded, community-based doulas in reducing maternal and infant health inequities

    • What “good collaboration” with lived experience leaders should actually look like

    • Concrete ways prevention coalitions and maternal health advocates can lock arms in the next 2–3 years

    Who this episode is for:

    • Prevention coalition members and state leaders

    • Maternal and child health practitioners

    • Doulas, nurses, social workers, and peer specialists

    • Anyone who has experienced pregnancy or infant loss or walks alongside those who have

    Connect with The Mace Anthony Williamson Foundation:

    Website: https://www.themawfoundation.org/

    National Prevention Summit 2026


    Drug Free America Foundation Links:

    • Website

    • Facebook

    • Instagram

    • YouTube

    • Twitter

    If this conversation resonates, share it with a colleague in prevention, maternal health, or public health—and invite a doula to your next coalition meeting.

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    57 mins
  • The Road to the Youth Declaration: Mobilizing a Global Youth Movement
    Nov 25 2025

    In this episode of Pathways to Prevention, host Dave Closson spotlights a powerful youth-led global effort: the Youth Declaration on Prevention, Treatment, and Recovery.

    What began as a spark at a CND side event in Vienna grew into a global core youth group, a multi-country survey, and a declaration that centers one clear message: nothing about us without us.

    Dave is joined by youth leaders and organizers from across the world, including Cressida (World Federation Against Drugs), Sana, Fuhaira, and Muhammad (Pakistan Youth Organization). Together, they unpack how this declaration came to life, what they learned from youth in 60+ countries, and why meaningful youth participation must be treated as a design principle—not a box to tick.

    ---------------

    If you are a youth leader or work with youth-serving organizations, this episode is your invitation to:

    1. Read the Youth Declaration and its full report to see where your current work already aligns with the six recommendations.
    2. Share your story: If you’re already taking action that reflects the declaration—programs, policies, campaigns, or peer-led initiatives—send your activities and outcomes to info@wfad.se for possible inclusion in an upcoming global youth declaration web magazine.
    3. Create real seats at the table: In your organization, community, or network, ask where youth are currently informed versus where they are truly involved in decision-making.

    Resources Mentioned

    • Youth Declaration on Prevention, Treatment, and Recovery – full text and data report
    • World Federation Against Drugs (WFAD) – declaration partners and hosts of the global youth web magazine
    • Pakistan Youth Organization – a youth-focused organization that helped conceptualize and drive the declaration
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    37 mins
  • It’s Never Too Late: Hope, Help, and Healing for Older Adults in Recovery
    Oct 21 2025

    Dave Closson sits down with Terry Gerlach, Supervisor of Clinical Services at Hazelden Betty Ford in Naples, to explore recovery and mental health in older adults. Terry shares her career pivot from corporate banking to clinical work, the power of holistic care that treats substance use and mental health together, and practical ways families and providers can recognize risk, strengthen protective factors, and support lasting recovery. The conversation dives into shame versus guilt, “taking your power back,” trauma-informed healing, and small habit shifts that build hopeful momentum at any age.Key takeaways

    • Recovery has no age limit. It’s never too late to ask for help and rebuild a meaningful life.
    • Treat both substance use and mental health together. A holistic approach closes harmful care “silos.”
    • Older adults face unique risk factors: loss, identity shifts, social isolation, mobility changes, and medication complexity.
    • Protective factors matter: sober support, faith, movement, purposeful activity, and service or mentorship.
    • Shift from shame to guilt. Shame attacks identity. Guilt focuses on behaviors you can change.
    • “Take your power back.” Focus on what you can control today. One day at a time counts.
    • Family and providers can be bridges. Notice subtle cues, stay connected, offer options without judgment.
    • Small practices, big impact: affirmations, breathwork, gratitude, “habit stacking,” and boundaries to prevent compassion fatigue.

    Topics covered

    - Holistic treatment: integrated care for substance use and mental health

    - Levels of care: residential, partial hospitalization, intensive outpatient

    - Older adult programming and considerations

    - Risk and protective factors for older adults

    - Shame vs. guilt and practical self-forgiveness routines

    - Trauma-informed care: EMDR, nervous system work

    - Family roles, early cues, and supportive conversations

    - Provider self-care and boundaries to avoid compassion fatigue

    - Simple daily practices: gratitude, affirmations, measured breathing, limiting negative media, transitional rituals

    Notable quotes- “It is never too late to get help. Help is available. You are worth saving.” — Terry

    - “Take your power back by focusing on what you can control—today.”

    - “Hope has no age limit.”

    Resources mentioned

    - Hazelden Betty Ford Foundation

    - Falling Upward by Richard Rohr

    - The Body Keeps the Score by Bessel van der Kolk

    - Atomic Habits by James Clear

    - VolunteerMatch.org for purpose-building opportunities

    -National Prevention Summit 2026

    Drug Free America Foundation Links:

    • Website

    • Facebook

    • Instagram

    • YouTube

    • Twitter

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    47 mins