The NIDA-funded NDEWS Coordinating Center at UF

The National Drug Early Warning System (NDEWS), funded to the University of Florida by the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA), provides the field with timely, salient, and valuable information on emerging substance use trends.

About nDEWS

ABOUT OUR

Coordinating Center

NDEWS is led by scientists from the University of Florida, New York University, and Florida Atlantic University. Our Coordinating Center (CC) draws heavily on established and emerging public health surveillance methods and integrates expertise from multiple disciplines.

NOVEL SURVEILLANCE

NEW TO NDEWS

Using novel surveillance to detect emerging drug trends

One aim of the new NDEWS is to incorporate and leverage novel surveillance methods to ensure early detection of signals of new and emerging drug trends, including data from "drug checking," an ongoing national venue-intercept study, our new Virtual HealthStreet, and the development of an innovative machine learning approach to detect emergence of new psychoactive substances in real-time through algorithms deployed to darknet drug markets and forums.

Novel Surveillance

Recent news

Post-CPDD Briefing

Category: News

The 86th CPDD Annual Meeting is now over; held in Montreal this past week, the meeting had the highest attendance ever! On Saturday, we held our…

snow dashboard

SNOW

State and National Overdose Web

The State and National Overdose Web (SNOW) is an interactive dashboard directed by NDEWS Co-Investigator Dr. Bruce Goldberger. SNOW contains information regarding drug-related outcomes in participating NDEWS sentinel sites across the United States. SNOW is publicly available and is to be used solely for informational purposes.

SNOW NDEWS background

Last modified: 08/21/2024

The National Drug Early Warning System (NDEWS) is funded by the National Institute on Drug Abuse (U01DA051126) to the University of Florida (PI: Cottler; Co-Is: Goldberger, Nixon, Striley), New York University (Co-I: Palamar), and Florida Atlantic University (Co-I: Barenholtz).