Title: Working To Make Youth-Guided, Family-Centered Recovery a Reality!
1Connecticut Turning To Youth and Families (CTYF)
Working To Make Youth-Guided, Family-Centered
Recovery a Reality!
2CTYF INTRO VIDEO
3The Country Has Moved Towards a Recovery
Paradigm
- Think Sustained Recovery
- Think Natural Environment for Each Person and
Family Supports - Think About Linking Addiction Rx with Existing
Communities of Recovery - Think About Incorporating Strategies for Building
Relationships Between Local Communities of
Treatment and Local Recovery Support Groups
Are You on Board? Or still on the
Platform? Are You Closing The Gap By
Reconnecting the Treatment Experience to
Recovery?
4What We Do
- Peer-Based Recovery Advocacy
- Connecting With Communities
- Peer-To-Peer Supports
5Peer-Based Recovery Advocacy
- Increasing awareness of the existence of the
millions of youth and families in sustained
recovery and promoting the positive impact they
can have on our communities and healthcare
delivery systems - Methods Recovery Videos, Online Recovery
Stories, Interactive Polling, etc. Putting A
Positive Face On Recovery - Promoting positive legislation at all levels to
widen the door of entry to recovery with a focus
more on what happens before and after primary
treatment - Recovery support across the lifespan and the
State (i.e. CTYF CCAR Work Together, and CTYF
Works To Unify The Grassroot Family Voices)
6Community Connections
- No single family, program or system has the
capacity to solve the growing and complex problem
of adolescent substance abuse alone.
Collaboration at the home, schools,
neighborhoods, towns, cities, and state levels
must occur to create true systems change for
better prevention, treatment and recovery access.
We must nurture the supports in areas where they
dont exist now! - Donna Aligata on Environmental
Strategies - CTYF Methods Recovery Film Festivals, Online
Community Creation, Mapping Of Existing Youth and
Family Recovery Assets, Local Strategic Planning
For Community Coalitions, and School-Based
Prevention and Recovery Support
7Peer-to-Peer Supports
- Lived recovery experience connects peers using
the power of lived recovery experience to drive
open conversations and messages of hope for
recovery - Positive peer support fosters culture change and
is contagious for tangible or virtual communities - Sustained recovery is supported and enhanced by
peers through social activities, work
opportunities, and easier recovery re-engagement
should a relapse occur - Peers groups create the needed sense of belonging
that is even more imperative for young people
than adults
Community Example Families, students and
teachers see the results of Central High Schools
Leadership Group. Yale Consultation Center also
has concluded in an evaluation that the
peer-to-peer prevention and recovery support
program has demonstrated that this model is
effective in improving school performance,
attendance, and behavior.
8Peer-Based Recovery Support ModelsHarnessing
The Power Of Lived Experience
9PEER-TO-PEER RESULTS VIDEO
10Recovery Support Challenges As We Have
Experienced It
- Major Challenges We Have Experienced For Moving
Peer Recovery Support Forward - Under-Studied / Under-Funded / Under-Valued
- Fragmented Systems (Mental Health and Addictions)
Between Children and Adult (Health Care and
Enforcement) - Critical Dilema
- How do we get the system to re-align itself so
Recovery-Oriented Practices are feasible? - How to integrate technology efficiencies into the
system?
11Recovery Support Financing Questions
- How can fees for service happen to support the
growth of peer-to-peer models and positive
social media technology? - What creative financing strategies can help
support a very basic level of infrastructure
for growing and implementing more recovery
support services? - How can we support family involvement when our
system bills and focuses on individuals?
12System Change Is Not For The Timid
The Economic Crisis A catalyst for integrating
into your strategies peer-to-peer
recovery-oriented transformational practices that
cost less and last longer
- We must create disequilibrium, abandon old ways
to remove barriers and promote positive changes - Look at technology and social media as an asset
not a risk for enhancing service deliveries - Think about ways to contaminate your projects
with peer-driven recovery-oriented practices - Communities have fostered recovery for years
without system support, the potential for what
could happen if the system truly supported
recovery is incredible
13An Interactive Online Recovery Support
Experience! www.ctyouthandfamilies.org info_at_ctyout
handfamilies.org - 860-838-3553