Title: MODULE 8 Applying Prevention to Community Groups
1MODULE 8Applying Prevention to Community Groups
2Part 1Engaging the Faith Community In Substance
Abuse Prevention
3Current Prevention Research
- Importance of multiple efforts
- Target various ages
- Address individuals as well as broader community
- Sustain efforts over time
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6Introduction
- Substantial search that shows positive
relationships between spirituality and
religiosity on physical and behavioral health. - Little credible research that shows the
effectiveness or ineffectiveness of faith - based
programs in the substance abuse field.
7Introduction (contd)
- A broad community approach to substance abuse
prevention will require - Meaningful dialogue and an understanding of
faith, spirituality, and the importance of
faith-based programs. - Adopting different paradigms to work with
religious groups and institutions. - Consideration of the medical research on faith,
spirituality, religion, and health.
8Definitions of Spirituality Religion Religion
- The outward expression of spiritual impulses, in
the form of specific religion or practice
(Pelletier, 2000) - Is characterized by a set of particular beliefs
around God or a higher power shared by a group of
individuals, and the practices, rituals, and
forms of governance that determine how those
beliefs are expressed. (CASA, 2001)
9Definitions of Spirituality Religion
Spirituality
- An inner sense of something greater than
oneself, a recognition of a meaning to
existence. (Pelletier, 2000) - Is a deeply personal and individualized response
to God, a higher power or an animating force in
the world? (CASA, 2001)
10Definitions of Spirituality Religion
Spirituality (contd)
- One does not have to engage in religious rituals,
belong to a church, or even believe in God to be
spiritual.
(CASA, 2001)
11Religion, Spirituality and Health
- Shamans and other religious figures have been
deliverers of health care for as long as human
societies have existed. - Only in the past 200-300 years has physical
disease been understood outside of religious or
spiritual terms. - In 1990, fewer than five medical schools in the
US offered courses in religion, spirituality and
medicine. - In 2001, nearly 80 of 126 US medical schools
either require or offer these courses.
(CSAT, 2001)
12Why the Renewed Interest?
- Mounting evidence from various empirical studies
about the use of religion as a coping strategy
associated with better psychological adjustment
and better health outcomes. - More articles on the topics of religion and
faith are appearing in leading medical journals.
(CSAT, 2001)
13Religion, Spirituality, and Substance Abuse
Research Sources
- Koenig et. al. Handbook of Religion and
Health, 2001. - Hernandez-Alarcon. Spirituality, Faith-Based
Community Programs Implications for Substance
Abuse Prevention. A report for the Division of
State and Community Systems Development CSAP
2001. - So Help me God Substance Abuse, Religion and
Spirituality. The National Center on Addiction
and Substance Abuse (CASA) at Columbia
University, A CASA White Paper, 2001.
14Religion, Spirituality, and Substance Abuse
Research Sources (contd)
- Religion Effects on Health Outcomes A
Literature Review. Prepared for CSATs Faith
and Community Partner Initiative. 2001 by
Logicon/ROW Services. - A Congregational Team Approach to Substance
Abuse Prevention. A report by CSAPs Central
CAPT, Faith Partners and The Johnson Institute,
2003.
15Substance Abuse Problems Among People of Faith
- Found among leadership and laity
- Regardless of faith, tradition, or denomination
- Cuts across racial, cultural, geographical,
gender, social and economic backgrounds
16N 4510CSAPs CCAPT, (2003)
17N 4510CSAPs CCAPT, (2003)
18N 4510CSAPs CCAPT, (2003)
19Clergy Substance Abuse An Important Problem
- 94 of clergy surveyed consider substance abuse
to be an important issue they face. - 38 find alcohol abuse involved in half or more
of the family problems they confront.
(CASA, 2001)
20Religion, Spirituality and Health
- In reviewing 1,200 studies in Handbook of
Religion and Health (2001), Harold G. Koenig et
al. Found positive correlations between religion
and physical and mental health. - Lower rates of cancer, disability, hypertension
and other diseases - Better response to illness and increased
longevity - Stronger coping and lower rates of depression.
21Religion, Spirituality and Health (contd)
- Linda Barnes of the Boston Medical Center found
that spirituality and religion can contribute to
preventative health (2000). - Better adolescent decision-making and well being,
reduced rates of violence, and fewer high health
risk and problem behaviors. - Low religiosity related to higher rates of
smoking, drinking, drug use, and adolescent
pregnancy.
(Hernandez-Alarcon, 2001)
22Religion, Spirituality, and Substance Abuse
- Spirituality included in theoretical constructs
and research as a protective factor and an
external asset (Hawkins et al. 1992, Benson
1998). - Low religious involvement related to increased
alcohol and drug abuse, becoming a lifetime
smoker. - Faith-based organizations promote healthy
lifestyles, provide alternative activities for
youth, deter family violence and build a strong
sense of community.
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27Negative Association Between Religion and
Substance Abuse
- Attendance at worship services
- Importance of religion
- Parents religiousness
- Participate in church-based youth programs
- Frequency of prayer or scripture reading
- Belief in life after death
28Religion Spirituality As a Protective Factor
for Youth
- Reduces the likelihood of choosing friends who
use substances - Instills moral values
- Increases coping skills
- Reduces the likelihood of turning to alcohol or
other drugs during stress - Provides an identifiable social support network
and sense of community - Provides organized social activities
29Albert Einstein
- Science without religion is lame, religion
without science is blind.
30Faith-Based vs. Science-Based
- Faith-Based describes programs sponsored by
churches, synagogues, mosques, temples, and other
communities. - Science-Based refers to prevention programs
developed with sound theoretical foundations and
empirical evidence. - If a Faith-Based organization selects a
Science-Based program, the result is that the
program is both.
(Bailey, 2001)
31Faith-Based vs. Science-Based (contd)
- Too often clergy and physicians, religion and
science, are ships passing in the night. When we
separate the worlds of medicine and spirituality,
we deny a host of individuals help that may aid
their recovery and ease their pain. This is
especially true with respect to substance abuse
and addiction.
(CASA, 2001)
32Involvement of faith organizations in substance
abuse prevention is important because
- Faith groups exist in nearly every community
throughout the country. - Between 88-95 of American men and women over
age 18 believe in God or a universal spirit and
between 88-92 with some form of religion. - Faith groups touch people of all ages, economic
levels, and ethnicities, and mobilize them. - Religion Spirituality are key protective
factors in the prevention and treatment of
substance abuse and in maintaining recovery.
33Involvement of faith organizations in substance
abuse prevention is important because (contd)
- Clergy and laity recognize substance abuse as an
important issue among family members in their
congregation. - Their presence lends credibility.
- They provide a sense of community and
responsibility. - Provides opportunities to work with families who
might otherwise not be involved in prevention. - There is support from congregational members.
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40Disconnect Between Preaching and the Problem
- Only 37 of clergy say they preach a sermon on
the subject more than once a year - 18 say they preach such a sermon annually
- 22 never preach a sermon on the topic
(CASA, 2001)
41Role of the Faith Community
- Prevention
- Recovery Support
42Prevention Goals
- Provide information to members
- Teach members to identify and counteract social
influences that encourage alcohol, tobacco, and
other drug use - Provide alcohol, tobacco, and drug-free
activities for youth - Teach social skills to resist pressures to use
ATOD
43Goals (contd)
- Establish guidelines for appropriate behavior for
members - Establish and maintain community-based prevention
efforts - Support adoption and implementation of community
policies to restrict advertising and reduce
alcohol access to alcohol and tobacco by youth
44Recovery/Support Goals
- Communicate hope and help
- Identify members in need of assistance
- Respond or intervene
- Match member needs to appropriate congregated or
community resource - Provide support
45Barriers to Involvement of The Faith Community
- Wet/Dry controversy
- Medical Treatment Model
- Lack of clergy training
46Barriers (contd)
- Denial or reluctance
- Competing demands
- Stigma
- Ambiguity
- Lack of awareness of problem
- Lack of awareness of what to do
47- Congregational Team Ministry Approach to
Substance Abuse A Model
48What is Substance Abuse Ministry?
- Team of Trained Lay People
- Members with Special Expertise
- Work Closely with Clergy
- Provide Education and Prevention
49What is Substance Abuse Ministry? (contd)
- Utilize Community Resources
- Provide Referral Assistance
- Provide Recovery Support
- Accountable for Ministry
50How Does This Ministry Help the Congregation?
- Equips youth and adults with skills
- Combines research-based prevention with faith
- Offers hope and referral assistance
- Reduces stigma and shame
- Helps members address alcohol and drugs
51What is Necessary to Start a Ministry?
- Key Lay Person (leader, facilitator)
- Clergy Support
- Material
- Tools
- Technical Assistance
52VIDEO
- PEOPLE OF FAITH, PARTNERS IN PREVENTION
53Finding the Key Person
- Leader, Facilitator
- Vision and energy
- Mature
- Effective skills
- Relates well to clergy
54Role of Clergy
- Leader of congregation
- Teacher, Preacher
- Counselor
- Bless Team
- Support
- Encourage
- Connect to structure
55Developing a Congregational Team Substance Abuse
Ministry
- Step 1 Introductory Training
- Step 2 Exploratory Meeting
- Step 3 Congregational Survey
- Step 4 Congregational Inventory
- Step 5 Congregational Team Training
- Step 6 Initiate Team Ministry
- Step 7 Ongoing Training, Community
Involvement, etc.
56Important Steps
- Exploratory meeting
- Congregational survey
- Congregational inventory
- Connect to community resources
57Getting Started
- Team meets regularly
- Learns to work as a team
- Early success
- Communicates with clergy
58Important Considerations
- Include both recovering and non-recovering team
members - Integrate ministry into life of congregation
- Sensitive to culture, faith tradition
- Develops a plan of action for accountability
59First Year
- Recovery Service
- Youth Education
- Parent/Adult Education
60TRISH MERRILL, RN FAITH PARTNERS 2525 Wallingwood
Drive, Building 8, 804 Austin, Texas
78746 Phone 512-451-9504 Toll free
888-451-9527 E-mail faithpartners_at_faithpartnersce
ntral.org ROGER SVENDSEN CSAPs CENTRAL
CAPT 2720 Highway 10 NE Mounds View, MN
55112 Phone 763-427-5310 Fax 763-427-7841
Toll Free 800-782-1878 E-mail
rsvendsen_at_miph.org
61MODULE 8Part 2
- A School Approach to Assisting Students
- Student Services/Assistance Approach to Student
Tobacco Use
62Why focus on tobacco use within a Student
Services/Assistance Program
- Current efforts to respond to youth tobacco use
tend to focus on the violation of policy as
primarily a discipline problem and not a health
issue. - Tobacco use is related to other student problems
and may be an early indicator of other health,
behavioral or academic problems.
63Student Services/Assistance Approach to Student
Tobacco Use
- Goal
- To integrate the early identification and
response to student tobacco use into the schools
comprehensive student services/assistance program.
64Discussion
- A Comprehensive Response to Youth Tobacco Use
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67Student Services/Assistance Program for Response
Process Objectives
- Identify students in need of assistance
- Intervene in a positive way to assist student.
- Pre-assess student needs and match with
appropriate school or community resource. - Support student throughout the process.
68Student Services/ Assistance Program for Response
Flow Chart
69School Policy Readiness
- Frame the issue of student tobacco use as
primarily a health issue. - Integrate student tobacco use violation into
existing student services/assistance procedures. - Establish consequences for tobacco that can be
applied uniformly to any student.
70School Policy Readiness (contd)
- Conduct in-school screening for tobacco use for
all students referred to student
services/assistance staff or teams. - Provide training for all school staff on their
role in responding to student tobacco use. - Provide training for all student
services/assistance staff on their role in
conducting in-school screening for tobacco use.
71School Staff Readiness Responsibilities of All
School Staff
- Observe and identify
- Document
- Share concern
- Refer
- Support
72Behavior of concern
- Any specific, observable behavior that causes you
to be concerned.
73VIDEO
74All School Staff Share Concern
- Step one I care
- Step two I see
- Step three I feel
- Step four LISTEN
- Step five I want
- Step six I will
75Responsibilities of All Student
Services/Assistance or Pre-Assessment Staff
- Screen all students referred to student
services/assistance for tobacco use. - Assess students referred for a tobacco-use
violation. - Develop an internal referral process.
76Responsibilities of All Student Services/
Assistance or Pre-Assessment Staff (contd)
- Communicate with other staff, students, parents
and primary caregivers when appropriate. - Provide after care support.
- Develop an appropriate referral form.
- Develop a working list of resources for tobacco
education and/or cessation.
77Student Services/ Assistance Staff Asking About
Tobacco Use
- FIVE As
- Ask - every student, every visit
- Advise - all tobacco users to quit
- Assess - willingness to quit
- Assist - student in quitting
- Arrange - follow-up and after care
78Questions and Discussion