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Consumer Involvement Recovery Oriented Systems of Care

This practice guideline emphasizes the involvement of consumers in determining their own care through the development of self-management strategies. It also highlights the integration of recovery experiences into treatment, representation of people in recovery on agency committees, and the provision of peer support and mentoring.

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Consumer Involvement Recovery Oriented Systems of Care

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  1. Consumer InvolvementRecovery Oriented Systems of Care

  2. Multiple Areas • Planning, delivering and evaluating services • While consumers: • Active partners in determining their own care • Emphasis on development of self-management strategies

  3. Connecticut Department of Mental Health and Addiction Services Practice Guidelines for Recovery-Oriented Behavioral Health Care

  4. Recovery experiences are integrated into treatment and training • Representation of people in recovery on agency steering committees and work groups • Planning, provision of peer support and mentoring, and providing training is reimbursed

  5. Patient receives an initial orientation to agency practices • Initial orientation is supplemented by the routine availability of information and agency updates • Policies that allow people in recovery maximum opportunity for choice and control in their own care

  6. Measures of satisfaction are collected routinely and in a timely fashion • Formal grievance procedures are made readily available to people to address their dissatisfaction with services • Administration enforces ethical practice • Assertive recruitment of people in recovery for staff positions

  7. Ongoing support for the development of a range of peer-operated services • Self-disclosure by employed persons in recovery is respected and not prohibited • Client exercise of rights is encouraged • The agency offers to host events and advocacy activities

  8. Recovery Coach • Role designed to bridge the chasm between brief professional treatment in an institution setting and sustainable recovery within each patient’s natural environment • Known as recovery coach, recovery mentor, recovery support specialist, recovery guide, personal recovery assistant

  9. Recovery Coach • Peer Credentials: experiential knowledge and experiential expertise • Variable models: • clinical model - treatment aide • community development model -organizer and mobilizer of community recovery resources

  10. Recovery Coach • Variable providers • delivered within existing treatment institutions • Delivered by other local community institutions (church, school, labor union) • delivered by a grassroots recovery advocacy or recovery support organization

  11. Recovery Coach The range of services provided with the framework of recovery coaching is indicated by the broad range of roles being proposed within “recovery coach” pilot studies. The recovery coach is a: • motivator and cheerleader(exhibits bold faith in individual/family capacity for change; encourages and celebrates achievement) • ally and confidant(genuinely cares, listens, and can be trusted with confidences)

  12. Recovery Coach • truth-teller (provides a consistent source of honest feedback regarding self-destructive patterns of thinking, feeling and acting) • role model and mentor (offers his/her life as living proof of the transformative power of recovery; provides stage-appropriate recovery education and advice) • problem solver(identifies and helps resolve personal and environmental obstacles to recovery)

  13. Recovery Coach • resource broker(links individuals/families to formal and indigenous sources of sober housing, recovery-conducive employment, health and social services, and recovery support) • advocate (helps individuals and families navigate the service system assuring service access, service responsiveness and protection of rights) • community organizer(helps develop and expand available recovery support resources)

  14. Recovery Coach • lifestyle consultant(assists individuals/families to develop sobriety-based rituals of daily living) • a friend(provides companionship)

  15. Recovery Coach A recovery coach is NOT a: • sponsor(does not perform AA/NA service work on “paid time”) • therapist (does not diagnose, probe undisclosed trauma/“issues”; does not refer to their support activities as “counseling” or “therapy”)

  16. Recovery Coach A recovery coach is NOT a: • nurse/physician (does not make medical diagnoses or offer medical advice), or a • priest/clergy(does not respond to questions of religious doctrine nor proselytize a particular religion/church)

  17. Recovery Coach • Should these functions be integrated into an existing role or within a new service role? • “Why do people need a recovery coach if they have access to a Twelve Step sponsor?” • “We don’t need recovery coaches. These functions are already being performed by addiction counselors, outreach workers and case managers.”

  18. Recovery Coach • The recovery coach role incorporates and refines some dimensions of existing roles (e.g., outreach worker, case manager) and is positioned between two other recovery support roles: the recovery support group sponsor and the addiction counselor.

  19. Recovery Coach/ Sponsor Differences • Link to Organization - accountability • Philosophical Framework • Scope of those Served • Recovery priming • Nature of Relationship • Scope of Services Provided • Compensation • Sponsor Limitations –anonymity, advocacy

  20. Recovery Coach/Addiction Counselor Differences • Service Goals and Timing • Education and Training • Use of Self • Nature of Service Relationship – ethics • Location of Service Delivery • Service Delivery Framework – recovery plan

  21. Recovery Coaches can… • increase the number of people entering addiction treatment • decrease the number of people “lost” from waiting lists to enter addiction treatment • divert individuals with lower problem severity and higher recovery capital into natural recovery support systems in the community (creating a better stewardship of limited treatment resources)

  22. Recovery Coaches can… • enhance recovery capital (e.g., employment, school enrollment, stable housing, healthy family and extended family involvement, sobriety-based hobbies, financial resources) and self-defined quality of life • increase post-treatment abstinence outcomes • delay the time period from discharge to first use following treatment

  23. Recovery Coaches can… • prevent lapses from becoming relapses • shorten the number, intensity, and duration of relapse episodes following treatment • decrease treatment readmission rates (slow the revolving door of treatment) • enhance treatment retention and completion

  24. Recovery Coaches can… • decrease the time between relapse and re-initiation of treatment and recovery support services (preserving recovery capital and minimizing personal and social injury) • result in readmission to less intensive, expensive levels of care • reduce attrition in first year affiliation rates with AA and other sobriety based support groups

  25. Peer Based Recovery Support Services • The reciprocal, non-hierarchical nature of the recovery coach relationship leaves open the danger of boundary violations and hidden abuses of power. • Rigorous screening and hiring procedures, training and supervision and the development of codes of ethical conduct governing the delivery of P-BRSS

  26. Recovery Community Centers • www.vtrecoverynetwork.org • http://www.proact.org/recovery_centers/the_philadelphia_recovery_community_center/

  27. References • White, W. (2006). Sponsor, Recovery Coach, Addiction Counselor: The Importance of Role Clarity and Role Integrity. Philadelphia, PA: Philadelphia Department of Behavioral Health and Mental Retardation Services.

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