/
Medicine Cabinets:  The Household Drug Dealer Medicine Cabinets:  The Household Drug Dealer

Medicine Cabinets: The Household Drug Dealer - PowerPoint Presentation

marina-yarberry
marina-yarberry . @marina-yarberry
Follow
350 views
Uploaded On 2018-10-26

Medicine Cabinets: The Household Drug Dealer - PPT Presentation

Addiction by the Numbers 843 died from overdoses in 2013 WI 45 Opiod Pain Relievers Oxycodone Hydrocodone and Methadone 27 Heroin 6951 Narcan saves approx 1 overdose every hour Average age of an overdose death 43 ID: 697312

coach recovery addiction drug recovery coach drug addiction community medication support abuse ccar family experience amp source minnesota services

Share:

Link:

Embed:

Download Presentation from below link

Download Presentation The PPT/PDF document "Medicine Cabinets: The Household Drug D..." is the property of its rightful owner. Permission is granted to download and print the materials on this web site for personal, non-commercial use only, and to display it on your personal computer provided you do not modify the materials and that you retain all copyright notices contained in the materials. By downloading content from our website, you accept the terms of this agreement.


Presentation Transcript

Slide1

Medicine Cabinets:

The Household Drug DealerSlide2

Addiction by the Numbers

843 died from overdoses in 2013 (WI)

45% Opiod Pain Relievers: Oxycodone, Hydrocodone, and Methadone27% Heroin+ 6951 Narcan saves = approx 1 overdose every hourAverage age of an overdose death: 4359% were of those who died were men45% of emergency room visits are due to drug abuse30% burglaries, 7% of vehicle thefts are drug-related23% sexual assaults, 30% physical assaults are drug or alcohol-related

Sources: Wisconsin Department of Health Services; National Institute on Drug AbuseSlide3

*Source:

JAMA Psychiatry Journal

Face of Addiction has ChangedYoung people in general (aged 18-24) are more likely to abuse drugs 90% of heroin users are white52% of users seeking treatment are women23 is the average age of someone with an opiate addiction75% live in small cities and non-urban areas81% of first time heroin users abused prescription drugs firstSlide4

Drugged Culture

4

6 MILLION Per Month

Source: State Health Facts 2013Slide5

Source: National Institute on Drug Abuse:

Monitoring the Future 2013 Survey Results

5Slide6

6

Prescriptions “Drugs”Slide7

What is Rx Drug

A

buse?7

Using a drug without a Prescription

Using a drug more than prescribed

Using a drug just to feel good or get highSlide8

How Rx Drugs are Obtained

8

National Institute on Drug Abuse: Monitoring the Future 2013 Survey ResultsSlide9

What Determines Addiction?

9

Biology

Genetics (Family with addiction)

Brain Chemicals (Dopamine levels)

Age (Younger brains more susceptible)

Chemical Interaction Specific Drugs

Mental Health Issues

Environment

Family/Friend Influences

Social/Economic Status

Low Self-esteem

Traumatic Experience

Physical/Emotional Pain

StressSlide10

Addiction is a Brain Disease

Need for drug like need for food

Control/reasoning capabilities overriddenPriorities changed from family, work, values, possessionsInability to make correct decisions10Slide11

Forgetfulness: losing everyday things such as car keys, wallet, money

Missing money and misplaced things

Isolation from familyOver-reaction, hostile or angryNew friendsStrange numbers on cell phoneDiscontinuation in hobbies or sports activitiesLies, half truths, manipulation11Who Is This Kid?Slide12

12

Household Head Shop

Aerosol cansPaint/glue/markersNutmegClovesVanillaHand SanitizerMouthwash

Cough MedicineVinegarBaking powder/sugar

Bent/missing spoons

Ink pens/straws

Tinfoil/baggie corners

Cotton balls

Dixie cups w/water

Hand sanitizer

Cotton

balls

Shoe

strings/bands

Black marks

What’s In YOUR House?Slide13

Safeguarding Your Family

Do NOT

leave medications out in the openKeep pill bottle caps on tightlyStore drugs in a private area or secure placeKnow how many pills you have and track themProperly dispose of old or unneeded medicinesRecognize missing household “high” items13Slide14

Changing Conversations on Medication

Ask your doctor about options

Lifestyle changesAlternatives to addictive medicationsRisks of medication use for self and others in familyChange how you talk about it or use itUse medications only when necessaryDon’t equate with “feeling good”, but to address a specific issueDon’t share prescriptions with anyoneKeep medications locked up and take privatelyTalk to kids about medication use and riskIncluding risk indicators for prescribed medication and over-the-counter medication abuse14Slide15

Changing Conversations on Addiction

Addiction is a brain disease

Not a weakness or moral deficiencyRecognizing warning signsMore for same effectLife revolves around using; abandon activities enjoyedNeglect of responsibilities/relationshipsContinue to use despite knowing it’s hurting you Understanding abuse versus addictionAbuse: get an OWI and you stop drinking/drivingAddiction: get an OWI but can’t change your behaviorHow to talk to someone who needs help JUDGMENT FREECare: I’m worried about youPersuade: Please get help…I don’t want to lose youRefer: I think talking to [someone] is a good ideaWhere to find helpCounty crisis lines, 211, support groups, counselor, AODA programPeople DO recover!

15

Source: 100+ responses from questionnaire of recovered and actively addictedSlide16

16

Life with AddictionSlide17

Recovery is Change

Home

JobFriendsFamilyActivitiesEntertainmentPlaces Frequented17Slide18

Pathway to Recovery

18

Outpatient

Support Groups

Inpatient

Sober Living

Recovery CoachSlide19

What is Recovery Coaching?

A Recovery Coach

Helps remove obstacles to recoveryMobilizes support networksLinks a person to the recovering communityServes as guide/mentor in recovery management Slide20

SPONSOR

Vetted by reputation within Recovery Community

No formal supervisionWorks within beliefs of a particular recovery fellowshipRelationship governed by group conscience; no external accountabilityDuration of Services can span yearsMinimal focus on ecology of recovery; minimal advocacy

No fees paid to sponsor or recovery fellowship

COUNSELOR

Emphasis on formal education - theory and science

Works within organizational hierarchy

Works within a particular organizational treatment philosophy

Significant power differential

Explicit ethical guidelines; high external accountability

Self-disclosure discouraged or prohibited

Considerable focus on past experience

Duration of service becoming brief and ever briefer

Paperwork extensive and burdensome

Works as paid helper; client or third party pays for service

RECOVERY COACH

Vetted by the community or organization

Varied degree of supervision

Works across multiple frameworks of recovery via choices of those with whom they work

Minimal power differential

Focus on present: What can you do today to strengthen your recovery?

Focus on linking to community resources and building community recovery capital; significant advocacy work

Works in paid or volunteer role

Defining the LanesSlide21

Describe

Recovery Coach role and functions

List the components, core values and guiding principles of recoveryBuild skills to enhance relationshipsExplore many dimensions of recovery of recovery and recovery coachingDiscover attitudes about self-disclosure and sharing your storyUnderstand the stages of recoveryDescribe the stages of change and their applications

Increase their awareness of culture, power and privilege

Address ethical and boundaries issues

Experience recovery wellness planning

Practice newly acquired skills

Recovery Coach CompetenciesSlide22

Motivator & Cheerleader

Role Model & Mentor

Problem SolverResource Broker AdvocateCommunity Organizer

Lifestyle ConsultantFriend & Companion

An Equal

Recovery Coach RolesSlide23

Community ApplicationSlide24

Western

New York Care Coordination Program

(Janice Tondora, Yale Program on Recovery and Community Health)Outcomes Achieved:68% Increase in competitive employment43% decrease in ER visits44% decrease in inpatient days56% decrease in self-harm51% decrease in harm to others11% decrease in arrests

ROSC Example

Source: GLATTC ROSC Webinar March 2015Slide25

Rhode

Island AnchorED program

In 2014, a total 232 people died of accidental overdoses in Rhode Island. Seven months after the program began, 112 survivors of overdoses in hospital emergency rooms were seen and 88 percent of them engaged in recovery supports. Recovery coaches are on call 24/7 at Kent, Memorial, Rhode Island, Miriam, Newport, Hasbro, Landmark and Westerly hospitals.“The survivor, a clean-cut young man about college age, overdosed while driving and caused a car accident,” the story began. “The recovery coach connected with the survivor, helping him understand the severity of this near-death experience and cultivated a willingness from the survivor to get help.” 

Emergency Room InterventionSlide26

Minnesota Recovery Connection:

In 2010, the Minnesota Department of Human Services Alcohol and Drug Abused vision (ADAD) launched a Recovery Community Organization (RCO) initiative. As part of this initiative, the Division awarded a grant to Minnesota Recovery Connection (MRC) in Saint Paul. MRC is tasked with strengthening the recovery community in Minnesota and providing support services to individuals who self-identify as being in recovery from addiction, usually alcohol or drug addiction.

2010 – 2014Number of volunteers 640Number of volunteer hours 18,129Time spent by type of volunteering in hours

Recovery coaching 28%

TRS 26%

Administrative volunteering (includes Board meeting hours) 19%

Special events 18%

Celebrating Families 3%

Outreach 2%

Other 2%

Minnesota Recovery ConnectionSlide27

Provide

environments where there can be:

Family Support and access to servicesPeers and AlliesJudgment free zone to reduce stigma with events and education Life skills and job trainingGroup Format ExamplesRecovery support groups similar to GSA’s

RAISE Groups (Appleton North)

Supporting Youth in SchoolsSlide28

Helios Addiction Recovery

Services:

Connecticut Community for Addiction Recovery (CCAR) modelPart of a recovery-oriented system of care Includes individuals and familiesTraining includes: Core competencies

Ethics and boundaries

Medication-assisted treatment review

Cultural awareness

Recovery Coach AcademySlide29

DATES

:

February 22 -26 LOCATION: St E’s HospitalCost for the training is $400 and includes:30 hrs for CCAR Recovery Coach certification.1 Certified Recovery Coach trainer.Access to additional CCAR trainingsOngoing consultation from trainerCCAR Recovery Coach Guide

Certification OpportunitySlide30

Open to anyone who is interested, often including:

Person in Recovery

Family MembersFriends and AlliesProfessions working with substance abuse and addictionThe CCAR Recovery Coach Academy© is an innovative new approach to healing people's lives that is unlike any other training. Utilizing a dynamic approach to learning that blends both process and content, the CCAR Recovery Coach Academy© offers a once-in-a-lifetime experience that has been referred to as "pure recovery genius", If you're ready to learn, be challenged, and reap valuable rewards for life, the CCAR Recovery Coach Academy© is a must for anyone in the recovery field.

Who Should Attend?Slide31

Jesse Heffernan

Professional Recovery Coach & Consultant

920-680-5991jheffernan@heliosrecovery.comwww.heliosrecovery.comContact Us

Lori Cross Schotten

Founding Director, Educator, SBIRT & Recovery Coach Consultant

920-213-1965

lorics@changeaddictionnnow.org

www.changeaddictionnow.org/Wisconsin.html