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Welcome to the Recovery Connections Network .We have spent the last ten years collecting resources so you don't have to spend countless precious hours surfing the Web .Based on personal experience we know first hand how finding help and getting those tough questions answered can be. If you cant find what you need here, email us recoveryfriends@gmail.com we will help you. Prayer is also available just reach out to our email !
- SRC Scottish Recovery Consortium
- Suicide Prevention GODS helpers
- PAIN TO PURPOSE
- Journey Pure Veteran Care
- Sobreity Engine
- Harmony Ridge
- In the rooms Online meetings
- LIFE PROCESS PODCAST
- Bill and Bobs coffee Shop
- Addiction Podcast
- New hope Philly Mens Christian program
- All treatment 50 state
- Discovery house S.Ca
- Deploy care Veterans support
- Take 12 Radio w Monty Man
- GODS MOUNTAIN RECOVERY CENTER Pa.
- FORT HOPE STOP VET SUICIDE
- CELEBRATE RECOVERY
- THE COUNSELING CENTER
- 50 STATE TREATMENT LOCATOR
- David Victorious Reffner Podcast
Wednesday, December 12, 2012
Tuesday, December 11, 2012
Three More States to Consider Requiring Welfare Recipients to Undergo Drug Tests
By Join Together Staff | December 10, 2012 | Leave a comment | Filed in Community Related, Drugs & Legislation
Lawmakers in Ohio, Virginia and Kansas say they will introduce legislation that would require welfare recipients to undergo drug tests before receiving benefits, according to MSNBC.
In Ohio, the proposed law would establish drug-testing programs in three counties. If applicants disclosed they had used illegal drugs, they would have to submit to a drug test. The bill would allocate an additional $100,000 for drug treatment programs.
In Virginia, a drug-testing law that previously was rejected has been revived. The earlier version failed after the state concluded it would cost $1.5 million to implement, but would save only $229,000.
Kansas State Senate Vice President Jeff King, who introduced a drug-testing bill in his state, said it is not intended to punish welfare recipients. “If folks test positive, we need to help them get help and help them get the job skills they need to kick the habit to get a job and keep a job,” he said.
Last month, Texas Governor Rick Perry called for drug tests for residents seeking welfare or unemployment benefits. Perry and Lieutenant Governor David Dewhurst want to expand a bill that will come before the state legislature next year that would mandate drug testing for “high-risk” welfare applicants, and would ban them from using public funds to purchase alcohol, tobacco or lottery tickets. Perry and Dewhurst want the rules to also include those applying for unemployment benefits.
A Florida law that required welfare applicants to undergo drug testing was halted last year after the American Civil Liberties Union of Florida sued the state to stop it. About 2.5 percent of the 4,000 adults tested before the program was stopped tested positive for drugs. Almost 2,500 people refused to take the drug test.
Monday, December 10, 2012
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People who could not find or get the help they needed are getting it. Peoples lives are being transformed because Recovery Connections empowers people to overcome there fears, gives them courage to step up out of the chains which entrapped them for most of their lives and take that first step toward freedom. Recovery Connections comes along side the one struggling for a lifetime of support if need be! Recovery Connections is our mission and helping hurting people is our passion! WE ARE REACHING PEOPLE AROUND THE WORLD!
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For more info e-mail us recoveryfriends@gmail.com
People who could not find or get the help they needed are getting it. Peoples lives are being transformed because Recovery Connections empowers people to overcome there fears, gives them courage to step up out of the chains which entrapped them for most of their lives and take that first step toward freedom. Recovery Connections comes along side the one struggling for a lifetime of support if need be! Recovery Connections is our mission and helping hurting people is our passion! WE ARE REACHING PEOPLE AROUND THE WORLD!
We’re building a movement, one community at a time.
And we’re doing it to help radically greater numbers of people get well.
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By removing stigma and shame, and
By improving the accessibility to resources of care available to people in recovery.
1. Awareness.
We’re proliferating a world-class, research-based awareness and education program to shatter the stigma and shame around substance use disorder to empower more people to enter recovery.
2. Transformation.
We’re facilitating system transformation to reach more people and provide greatly improved recovery care. This includes helping communities:
Mobilize all community sectors—public and private—in system transformation;
Extend the community of recovery into the workplace through strategic employer partnerships;
Engage the private sector to create a financially sustainable recovery model; and
Foster the development of a holistic service network that reflects the chronic nature of substance use disorder.
We’re proliferating a world-class, research-based awareness and education program to shatter the stigma and shame around substance use disorder to empower more people to enter recovery.
2. Transformation.
We’re facilitating system transformation to reach more people and provide greatly improved recovery care. This includes helping communities:
Mobilize all community sectors—public and private—in system transformation;
Extend the community of recovery into the workplace through strategic employer partnerships;
Engage the private sector to create a financially sustainable recovery model; and
Foster the development of a holistic service network that reflects the chronic nature of substance use disorder.
Ads on Recovery Connections are priced as follows:
Full page on top...........................
Banner ad on top (4 vertical inches).......................
News Column ad...................$15.00 per insertion (up to 5 inches)
................$20.00 per insertion (up to 10 inches)
(News column ads scroll off the page in a few days.)
Blue sidebar.......................
Red sidebar.......................
We can host many types of ads, photo, etc.
For more info e-mail us recoveryfriends@gmail.com
Men and Women Are Helped Differently by Alcoholics Anonymous
By Join Together Staff |
December 7, 2012 |
Leave a comment | Filed in
Alcohol, Research & Treatment
Men and women benefit in different ways from Alcoholics Anonymous (AA), a new study suggests.
Men benefit more from avoiding companions who encourage drinking and
social situations in which drinking is common, according to Health24.
Women benefit from the program by having increased confidence in their
ability to avoid alcohol when they feel sad, anxious or depressed.
“Men and women benefit equally from participation in AA, but some of
the ways in which they benefit differ in nature and in magnitude,” lead
researcher John F. Kelly, PhD, of the Massachusetts General Hospital
Center for Addiction Medicine said in a news release.
“These differences may reflect differing recovery challenges related to
gender-based social roles and the contexts in which drinking is likely
to occur.”
One-third of AA’s members are women, the article notes.
The researchers studied more than 1,700 participants in AA, 24
percent of whom were women. They were enrolled in a study called Project
MATCH that compared three alcohol addiction treatment approaches. The
study tracked participants’ success in maintaining sobriety and whether
they attended AA meetings. It also evaluated specific measures, such as
participants’ confidence in their ability to stay sober in certain
situations.
In both men and women, AA participation increased confidence in the
ability to deal with high-risk drinking situations, and increased the
number of social contacts who supported their recovery efforts. For men,
the effect of both of those changes on the ability to stay sober was
twice as strong, compared with women in the study. Women were much more
likely than men to benefit from improved confidence in their ability to
stay away from alcohol when they were sad or depressed.
The study appears in Drug and Alcohol Dependence.
Sunday, December 9, 2012
RIMROCK BILLINGS MONTANA
The aspects of Family Week that were the
most helpful to me were the lectures and the group therapy sessions. I
will highly commend the Rimrock Foundation and its professional staff.
— Linda L.
— Linda L.
About Us
Alcohol, Drug, Eating Disorder, Gambling Addiction, Drug Addiction, Treatment in the Northern Rockies
With over 40 years of experience in treating addictive diseases and
compulsive behaviors, Rimrock Foundation offers the most comprehensive
and effective treatment services available. Providing inpatient and
outpatient care, Rimrock’s staff of highly qualified and exceptional
faculty offers specialized care that is tailored to the individual and
their needs.
- Co-occurring disorders
- Established, proven programs are in place for patients with co-occurring disorders that may include mental health issues such as depression and compulsive behaviors, including gambling.
- We also have specific programs for Teen Alcohol Treatment and Teen Drug Treatment and a leader in providing effective treatment for eating disorders such as Anorexia and Bulimia.
- Outpatient and Intensive Outpatient
- Providing top quality outpatient and aftercare services, we are consistently breaking new ground by crafting innovative and new successful addiction treatment programs to assist people who suffer from compulsive and addictive behaviors.
- Partial Hospitalization and Medically Monitored Inpatient
- Rimrock Foundation pioneered the use of the integrated treatment model and we continue to lead the field of addiction treatment providers. We set the standard for alcohol and drug addiction inpatient treatment.
- Inpatient Treatment is the keystone component in the treatment of, and successful recovery from, addictions and co-occurring disorders.
We do so much more than treat the addiction. At Rimrock Foundation,
we help individuals find balance and regain consistent life choices to
improve their lives and their health. Our integrated treatment model
promotes healthful life choices and stems from a unique therapeutic
learning environment that sustains and encourages long term growth and
healing. Our staff of 60 has one goal – helping patients choose freedom
and health over sick dependencies.
Individualized, Flexible, Family Centered, and Affordable treatment
in the Northern Rockies – Rimrock Foundation is where new beginnings
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Rimrock Foundation | 1231 North 29th Street | Billings, MT 59101
(800) 227-3953 | (406) 248-3175
Opioid Overdose Treatment and Prevention: Often Overlooked at Community Level
By Celia Vimont |
December 7, 2012 |
3 Comments | Filed in
Community Related, Prescription Drugs, Prevention & Treatment
While many programs aimed at prescription drug abuse focus
on how to stop diversion of medications, an often overlooked but
critical issue is preventing and treating opioid overdoses, according to
a Brown University researcher.
Traci Green MSc, PhD,
Assistant Professor of Emergency Medicine and Epidemiology, studied
prescription opioid overdoses in three communities in Connecticut and
Rhode Island that were experiencing a rash of deaths from opioid
overdoses in 2009.
“Our goal was to understand not just why it was happening, but what
we can do now to prevent it,” said Dr. Green, who spoke about her
research at the recent annual meeting of the Association for Medical
Education and Research in Substance Abuse.
Dr. Green and her colleagues conducted a rapid assessment and
response project, convening a community advisory board of substance
abuse treatment professionals, people in the recovery community, active
opioid users, EMS providers, and state and local officials to guide
their research. They looked at data on prescription opioid overdoses,
collected interviews with 195 people, and discussed how to respond to
the growing crisis.
“We found that awareness around the topic of overdose and drug
poisoning was lacking,” Dr. Green said. “People didn’t know it was a
problem. They didn’t know what an overdose looks like. It made us
realize that in these communities, there is a great deal of stigma
around prescription opioid overdoses.”
The community advisory board came up with a number of suggestions,
including working with local clinicians specializing in treating
substance abuse and chronic pain, to develop safer prescribing tools
that would be locally relevant. They devised resources for clinicians
with concerns about patient addiction or drug diversion. They created
and distributed posters and other educational materials in English and
Spanish to inform the public about opioid overdoses in the small towns
and suburban New England communities experiencing the overdose
outbreaks.
The group also made recommendations on how clinicians can talk with
their patients about oversedation and symptoms of overdose. “People
taking opioids need to talk with their loved ones or people they live
with about these issues. They also need to create a household-based
intervention for securing pills, especially if they live with young
people, because they have medication for pain control in their home that
has the potential to be a fatal poison.”
While both Connecticut and Rhode Island have prescription monitoring
programs (PMPs), they, like most such programs, are designed to thwart
“doctor shopping,” and generally do not offer resources on overdosing,
according to Dr. Green. Her group worked with the agencies that run PMPs
in those two states to provide online tools for clinicians, and to
develop materials aimed at preventing and treating overdoses.
Dr. Green found the communities she worked with were interested in programs to use naloxone
(Narcan), a drug that safely reverses the potentially fatal side
effects of an overdose of oxycodone, heroin and other opioids. It has
been routinely used by emergency rooms and ambulance crews for decades.
In the past few years, naloxone has been distributed free to opioid
users and their loved ones, in a growing number of sites around the
country.
A recent report by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
(CDC) found that widely distributing naloxone, and training people in
how to use it, could save many lives. It has successfully reversed more
than 10,000 drug overdoses since 1996, according to the CDC report.
Through the study, three substance abuse treatment centers and one
recovery center in the study communities hosted pilot programs of
prescribed take-home naloxone. They continue to offer the medication to
clients, as part of the Connecticut Department of Mental Health and
Addiction Services’ new naloxone initiative.
As a result of increased awareness about opioid overdoses, which came
about in large part through Dr. Green’s research, both Connecticut and
Rhode Island passed Good Samaritan laws
during the course of the study. The laws give people limited immunity
on drug possession charges if they seek medical help for someone
suffering from an overdose. Rhode Island’s new law also promotes and
protects the administration of naloxone by laypersons in a witnessed
overdose.
Another important outcome of the study was educating local officials
that opioid overdoses are not just a problem in major cities, but are
also occurring in towns and suburbs, Dr. Green noted. “Treatment centers
are often located in cities but drug use is everywhere. Limited or no
treatment options – what we call ‘treatment deserts’ – in small towns
and suburbs are contributing to the overdose deaths we are seeing there.
We need to think about how to bring treatment opportunities to troubled
non-urban areas – through satellite centers, using transportation
vouchers to allow clientele to come to the larger treatment centers, or
other options.”
One issue that needs attention in communities, Dr. Green observes –
even in the small towns and suburbs like the ones she studied – is the
high risk of overdose and relapse for prisoners leaving correctional
facilities. “There is a need to work with the incarcerated population
before they leave to get overdose prevention messaging, both for heroin
and prescribed pain medication,” she says. “It needs to be part of
pre-release planning. This is a profound risk that we cannot ignore.”
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