webinar 7: from dual recovery to recovery of the whole person 1

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Webinar 7: From Dual Recovery to Recovery of the Whole Person 1

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PLEASE NOTE : These webinars will be recorded and be made available on our website for future viewing. As a participant in the webinar, your name, voice and any interactions you have in the Q and A session may be included in the recording.. Thank you for your participation!

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Page 1: Webinar 7: From Dual Recovery to Recovery of the Whole Person 1

1

Webinar 7: From Dual Recovery to Recovery

of the Whole Person

Page 2: Webinar 7: From Dual Recovery to Recovery of the Whole Person 1

Telephones will be muted

You may submit questions during the webinar using the chat function or wait until the end of the webinar when telephones will be unmuted

for questions and answers.

Page 3: Webinar 7: From Dual Recovery to Recovery of the Whole Person 1

DISCLAIMER

PLEASE NOTE: These webinars will be recorded and be made available on our

website for future viewing.  As a participant in the webinar, your name,

voice and any interactions you have in the Q and A session may be included in the

recording.. Thank you for your participation!

Page 4: Webinar 7: From Dual Recovery to Recovery of the Whole Person 1

Webinar 7: Dual to WholeWelcome to the seventh in a series of webinars for peer

supporters drawn from the Recovery to Practice (RTP) project, a SAMHSA-funded project to foster recovery-

oriented practice in behavioral health professions.

This webinar series is presented by members of the International Association of Peer Supporters (iNAPS) with generous assistance of Optum, without whom this series

would not be possible.

iNAPS is solely responsible for the content of the webinars.The webinar will begin at noon, Eastern.

Thank you for your participation!

Page 5: Webinar 7: From Dual Recovery to Recovery of the Whole Person 1

Presenters:

Patrick HayesRegion 4 Recovery

Support Specialist for the Illinois Dept. of

Human Services/Division of

Mental Health

Erik SimkinsWellness Coach and Certified Recovery

Support Specialist from the Human Service Center in Peoria, IL

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Moderator:Peter Ashenden

Director of Consumer AffairsOptumHealth Behavioral Solutions

Contact InformationT +1 612-632-2963 F +1 877-309-8548

[email protected]

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ObjectivesFor you to be able to:

Define co-occurring disorders and reasons why they may co-exist

Explain what is meant by integrated treatment

Describe three types of recovery capital that can be used in recovery of the whole person

Page 8: Webinar 7: From Dual Recovery to Recovery of the Whole Person 1

DUAL

RECOVER

Y

What is….

Page 9: Webinar 7: From Dual Recovery to Recovery of the Whole Person 1

(Canadian Foundation for Drug Policy – Public Health Approach to Drug Control 2005)

Page 10: Webinar 7: From Dual Recovery to Recovery of the Whole Person 1

Risk Factors for Co-occurring Conditions

• poverty or unstable income• difficulties at home or school• unemployment or problems at work• isolation or lack of a social network• homeless or lack of decent housing• family problems• family history of mental illness, substance abuse, or concurrent disorders

• past or ongoing trauma, abuse, or neglect• discrimination• biological or genetic factors• those who are native or indigenous people• involvement in the criminal justice system

Page 11: Webinar 7: From Dual Recovery to Recovery of the Whole Person 1

ACE Study17,000 peopleAdverse childhood

experiencesMajor risk factors for

illness, poor quality of life, and death

Worst health and social problems are a consequence of ACEs

ADVERSE CHILDHOOD EXPERIENCE (ACE)

Page 12: Webinar 7: From Dual Recovery to Recovery of the Whole Person 1

Source: SAMHSA 2008/2009 Survey on Drug Use and Health

8.9 million adults have co-occurring mental and substance use conditions

Less than 8% receive treatment for both conditions

More than 50% receive no treatment at all

How Many?

Page 13: Webinar 7: From Dual Recovery to Recovery of the Whole Person 1

Trauma and substance use66% of men and women in substance abuse

treatment report childhood abuse and neglect

77% of male veterans in substance abuse inpatient units were exposed to severe childhood trauma; 58% had a history of lifetime PTSD

50% of women in substance abuse treatment have a history of rape or incest (Huckshorn, 2012)

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Co-occurring conditions is an expectation… …not an exception.

~~Ken Minkoff

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Signs of Substance Use

Four “C’s” to look for: Loss of ControlCompulsive useCravingConsequence

Page 16: Webinar 7: From Dual Recovery to Recovery of the Whole Person 1

Recovery may occur whether one views the illness as

biological or not.

The key is understanding there is hope for the future,

rather than understanding there was a cause in the past.

~ William Anthony

Assumptions about Recovery

Page 17: Webinar 7: From Dual Recovery to Recovery of the Whole Person 1

What’s Strong

Recovery of the Whole Person

Page 18: Webinar 7: From Dual Recovery to Recovery of the Whole Person 1

A word about languageTriple Stigma

Mental disorderSubstance use disorder

Stereotype / stigma

Page 19: Webinar 7: From Dual Recovery to Recovery of the Whole Person 1

MICA (mentally ill, chemical abuser)MISA (mentally ill, substance abuser)MISU (mentally ill, substance using)CAMI (chemically abusing, mentally ill)SAMI (substance abusing, mentally ill)MICD (mentally ill, chemically dependent)Dual diagnosis or Dually disorderedCo-morbid disorders

Language is powerful

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Language Matters

Source: Language Matters Brochure – Hogg Foundation

Page 21: Webinar 7: From Dual Recovery to Recovery of the Whole Person 1

Language is powerful

PerceptiveSensitive

ShyExuberant

Reframe

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Origins of Addiction - Vincent Felitti, MD. (ACE Researcher)

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Environmental Factors

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The whole is greater than the sum of its parts.

~~Aristotle

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Mental health and addiction fields have different historical roots and traditions.

Two distinct groups of practitioners have different training and approaches.

Integration has been difficult because of political, fiscal, structural, and attitudinal influences that have been hard to overcome.

Focus on deficits, dysfunction, illness, and treatment has hindered integration.

Segregated Systems

Page 26: Webinar 7: From Dual Recovery to Recovery of the Whole Person 1

Research has consistently shown that for individuals to receive effective care, mental health and addiction services

must be integrated.

~~ Davidson & White

Integrated Treatment

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Stages of Change

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Physical

Financial

Social

Spiritual

Occupational

Intellectual

EnvironmentalEmotional

Stages of Change

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Stage-wise Treatment

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Harm Reduction

AlcoholCigarettes

Street Drugs Prescription Drugs

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Harm Reduction

Self-Help Resource

Search for “HARM REDUCTION” and “ICARUS PROJECT”

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Recovery Capital

Things we can be grateful for…

• Social• Physical• Human

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SMAL

L G

ROU

PS

Page 35: Webinar 7: From Dual Recovery to Recovery of the Whole Person 1

Finding Hidden TreasureSteps:

1. Three types (social, physical, human)2. Give one example of recovery capital

(in each category)3. Four rounds, list examples4. Share ‘aha’ moments in group5. Share with large group

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ROLE

PLA

Y

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SummaryAre you able to:

Define co-occurring disorders and reasons why they may co-exist?

Explain what is meant by integrated treatment?

Describe three types of recovery capital that can be used in recovery of the whole person?

Page 38: Webinar 7: From Dual Recovery to Recovery of the Whole Person 1

? ? ? Questions….

To unmute your line, press *6.

To mute your line again, press *6

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For more information:Overall RTP Project

www.samhsa.gov/recoverytopractice

Resource Librarywww.dsgonline.com/rtp/resources.html

Peer Supporter Disciplinewww.inaops.org

Wounded Healer Videohttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=orxEawi9qro

Page 40: Webinar 7: From Dual Recovery to Recovery of the Whole Person 1

Certificate

E-mail: [email protected]

A link to the self-check quiz is now on the iNAPS website: www.naops.org

Within 30 days, a certificate will be mailedto the address you provide

when you complete the quiz.

Slides are available after taking the quiz – or by request.

Page 41: Webinar 7: From Dual Recovery to Recovery of the Whole Person 1

Special thanks…

Special thanks to Chacku Mathai, for his generous help in developing

this module

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Next WebinarRecovery Relationships

December 2, 2013

Go to our website: www.naops.org for up-to-date information

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On behalf of the International Association of

Peer Supporters (iNAPS) and Optum

Thank you!