Create Recovery-Ready Communities

From Media Wiki
Revision as of 23:24, 24 November 2019 by Josiebeets (talk | contribs)
Jump to: navigation, search
Return to Opioid Top-Level Strategy Map or ZOOM MAP - Improve Treatment & Enable Recovery of People with SUDs or ZOOM MAP - Strengthen Peer Recovery Support Services & Programs

Overview

Recovery is not just a matter of individual treatment or individual approaches combined with peer group support. The whole community plays a role in supporting successful recovery.
 

Programs and Approaches

Recovery Oriented Systems of Care (ROSC)

One approach advocated by SAMHSA and others is the Recovery Oriented Systems of Care.
  According to Ijeoma Achara, CEO of Achara Consulting, an ROSC is NOT:
 
  • A Model
  • Primarily focused on the integration of recovery support services
  • Dependent on new dollars for development
  • A new initiative
  • A group of providers that increase their collaboration to improve coordination
  • An infusion of evidence-based practices
  • An organizational entity, group of people or committee
  • A closed network of services and supports


Dr. Achara continues to explain that a ROSC is:

  • Value-driven APRROACH to structuring behavioral health systems and a network of clinical and non-clinical services and supports
  • Framework to guide systems transformation


SAMHSA produced a guide book on Recovery Oriented Systems of Care in 2010, but there have been improvements to that general approach in recent years.

A ROSC is a coordinated network of community-based services and supports that is person-centered and builds on the strengths and resiliencies of individuals, families, and communities to achieve abstinence and improved health, wellness, and quality of life for those with or at risk of alcohol and drug problems[1] . Visit Recovery-Oriented Systems of Care (ROSC) to learn more.

Café Model

  The Recovery Cafe Model allows those in recovery to have a safe place that "meets people where they are on the recovery continuum, engages them for a lifetime of managing their disease, focuses holistically on a person’s needs, and empowers them to build a life that realizes their full potential."[2] The organization is committed to successfully replicating the model in additional communities. Click here to bring a Recovery Cafe to your community.
 

Recovery Initiative

  The Addiction Policy Forum will work with national partner Faces & Voices of Recovery to support the growth of statewide recovery community organizations across all 50 states and to enhance recovery support throughout the nation.[3]
   

Crisis Center

  The Addiction Policy Forum is partnering with Live4Lali, a community-based non-profit in Illinois that provides a robust array of resources for individuals, families, and communities struggling with substance use disorder (SUD). Live4Lali works to prevent and raise awareness of substance use among individuals, families and communities, and minimize the overall health, legal and social harms associated with substance use.[4]
 

Specific Ways to Make a Community More "Recovery Ready"

  There is no single program or innovation that makes a community the ideal place to support recovery, but communities can add things and then integrate them with treatment and recovery services to create a community that provides more support and better options for people in recovery.  

Men's Sheds

This concept originated in Australia in the late 1990s, and there are now more than 1,000 Men's Sheds in Australia with thriving movements in a growing number of other countries. Available buildings (such as vacant warehouses, foreclosed houses that have been possessed by the city or county, or vacant space in a retail center) can be donated, rented or purchased to create a space for men to gather (and it would not need to be limited to men, but that has been the roots). The space is then filled with tools, workbenches, and materials that can be used for the men to tinker, build, fix, and putter--all while building new social relationship. More information on Men's Sheds

 

Community Gardening

Integrating participation in with a community gardening program can bring many benefits to people in recovery. It provides positive social interaction, skill building, improve access to healthy foods and more. Ideally, involvement with community gardening could be integrated with peer-to-peer recovery groups, recovery coaches, tools like rTribe or Triggr, or a comprehensive success plan managed in a community care coordination platform like XCare Community.
  More information on how gardening helps with recovery

 

Time-Banking

More details More information on Time Banking

Fitness & Recreation-based Recovery Programs

Programs like Phoenix Multisport in Colorado (and other places) have demonstrated the power of having a recovery community that emphasizes active living and recreation.

Tools & Resources

TR - Create Recovery Ready Communities

Scorecard Building

Potential Objective Details(Under Construction) 
Potential Measures and Data Sources(Under Construction) 

Actions to Take

Actions for Coalitions and Partners

Resources to Investigate

More RTI on Create Recovery Ready Communities

PAGE MANAGER: [insert name here]
SUBJECT MATTER EXPERT: [fill out table below]

Reviewer Date Comments
     

 

Sources

 


 

  1.  


[1]