Key Departments – Publications

Key Departments - Publications
Lifeline Project Ltd

39-41 Thomas Street
Manchester
M4 1NA
0161 839 2075

[email protected]
www.lifelinepublications.org

Twenty years ago Michael Linnell was employed by Lifeline as a Training Resource Officer and Lifeline Publications was born. The department didn’t come into existence in its present form until a few years later but it’s as good a starting point as any other and a good excuse for a birthday.

Over the last twenty years our production methods have become more complex. “Smack in the Eye” was produced by drawing the artwork onto large boards which were then photographed and turned into film to print from. “The Ballad of the Two Charlies”, funded by Salford DAT, and “Lickin Shot”, funded by ourselves, which both launched this year, were produced using the combined skills of two illustrators, writers and two graphic designers using the latest computer technology as well as, in the case of “The two Charlies”, a stand-up comedian. However, the one thing that hasn’t changed is the process behind the development of our publications, a process we have used and refined over the last twenty years.

This process is simple. It involves talking and listening to our audience and consulting with them at all stages of production. Many of our publications tell stories, stories of real people’s lives and experiences and our aim is to honestly reflect those expereiences. This is what makes them acceptable and credible to our target audience and is the key to engaging this audience. Without this involvement from the target audience we wouldn’t be able to continue to produce the standard of resources we do today. From “Smack in the Eye” to “The Two Charlies” it is this involvement and this process combined with the skills and hard work of the department’s staff that enable us to produce publications we can be proud of.

Kevin Robinson

Alcopops Poster (K1)
The poster and postcards feature information on: drinking, driving and overcrowding cars; advertising; alcohol content; drinking to appear hard, risky situations; drinking alone and helping friends. Space is provided for local information.
Who do they tell? (A46)
8 page booklet detailing the records that are kept by drug services about their clients and in what circumstances information is shared. Includes information about the National Drug Treatment Monitoring System and the Treatments Outcome Profile.
Features
Drug-War Milestone: Record levels
Drug-related searches and offences in the UK have now reached unprecedented levels. First, drug-related stops & searches by the police in England & Wales climbed to a record level of 405,000 in 2006/07, up from just 32,500 in 1986. This constitutes a twelve-fold increase in 20 years, and amounts to over 1,100 drug-related stops & searches per day
‘Our health, our care, our say’
In January the Department of Health published a joint health and social care white paper; ‘Our health, our care, our say: a new direction for community services’. A case study under the Chapter ‘Ensuring our reforms put people in control’ describes a service for ‘drug and alcohol misusers’.