Sunday, October 11, 2015


Best of the week from Choose Help

Suboxone Treatment - How to Improve Your Odds of Success

Suboxone Treatment - How to Improve Your Odds of Success
The 5 secrets to finding success with Suboxone: What you need to know about Suboxone addiction treatment for heroin or pain pills.
Suboxone treatment - how can you make sure it works for you?

Suboxone and the Need for Addiction Treatment

Quitting opioids? Then you’re probably at least considering Suboxone... and why not, after all, Suboxone and methadone increase your odds of long-term recovery while also reducing withdrawal discomfort.1
So if considering Suboxone, you might wonder why you also need to bother with addiction treatment – if a daily pill takes away your cravings and withdrawal symptoms… what’s left to worry about?
But the truth is, by combining medication with psychosocial therapies you greatly increase your odds of lasting success.
Without addressing your addictive tendencies and without learning compensatory strategies to manage the brain changes associated with addiction, you’ll likely relapse once off Suboxone – or if you stay on Suboxone over the long-term, you’ll just get addicted to something else (cocaine, alcohol, etc.)
Read on to learn more about:
  • Why you need counseling as well as medication – and what you can expect to learn from counseling and other behavioral therapies
  • Why you don’t just ‘trade addictions’ when initiating Suboxone therapy
  • The long-term risks associated with cold-turkey opioid detox
  • How to get the most out of your Suboxone therapy
  • Your eligibility for Suboxone
If Suboxone alone could do the job, you wouldn’t likely see the manufacturer (Reckitt Benckiser) recommending Suboxone as only one part of a complete treatment plan that should also include counseling and behavioral therapy.2

6 Essential Benefits of Addiction Treatment

Why medication alone isn't enough...
Medications can reduce cravings and withdrawal symptoms to a manageable level. They help you stabilize and focus and they greatly increase your odds of lasting change - but as powerful as medications like Suboxone are, they're not a magic cure; you'll still need to work very hard.
Addiction causes brain changes that lead to compulsion and poor impulse control.3These brain changes are lasting or permanent and they cause functional changes to the way you think and feel. Fortunately, by learning coping strategies, such as those taught in an addiction treatment program, you can learn to manage your impulses and minimize your risks.
Whether you get intensive rehab care or join an intensive outpatient group, most addiction treatment programs are designed to help you make difficult changes and to provide you with certain necessary skills - here's a list of 6 essential benefits of participation:4

1. Sustaining Motivation

It’s normal to feel somewhat ambivalent about major life change and to find that motivation waxes and wanes over time.
  • But when a temporary motivation dip can lead to relapse and lastingconsequences, it’s important to prepare for down-turns and make certain that your long-term goals drive your day-to-day behaviors.
Motivational enhancement therapies help you overcome drug ambivalence, identify personally relevant goals (what’s important to you – not anyone else) - and teach skills that keep you focused on your long-term objectives.

2. Increase Relapse Prevention Skills

Long-term goals are only as useful as your ability to manage immediate impulses and cravings. Therefore, virtually all addiction treatment programs teach relapse preventions skills, such as:
  • Looking back at past relapses - identifying behavior patterns associated with relapse.
  • Identifying the people, places and things that you associate with using/drinking.
  • Learning to identify warning signs of imminent relapse (such as overconfidence, isolation, deception, etc.)
  • Learning relapse prevention coping strategies, such as distraction techniques, mindfulness and scheduling.
  • Writing a recovery plan for high-risk situations.

3. Replacing Negative Activities with Constructive Habits

If you take Suboxone but continue to engage in all the same negative or risky behaviors of active addiction you are likely to fall back to getting high.
  1. Your environment, behaviors and thoughts all influence your ability to maintain recovery.  
  2. You need to identify negative habits and make a plan to replace these with more productive activities.
For example, you are more likely to maintain recovery by getting out of the house and working/volunteering/going to school than you are by hanging around all day with old drug-using friends.

4. Improve Frustration Tolerance and Problem Solving Ability

By letting small problems build into overwhelming obstacles you increase the amount of frustration in your life. In the past you turned to drugs or alcohol as a way to cope with frustration, what will you turn to now?
By learning better problem solving skills and by learning to handle frustration and other negative emotions you increase your chances of lasting recovery.

5. Build and Sustain Healthy and Supportive Relationships

Most people in active addiction behave in ways that diminish the trust and solidity of important relationships. In addiction treatment you may receive couples or family counseling to help repair past damage and to rebuild healthier systems that support recovery.
You’ll also develop new sober friendships to replace the relationships you lose when changing your lifestyle.

6. Improve Your Community Functioning

Through addiction treatment programs you gain access to volunteer, educational and vocational programs that get you out into the community in a positive way.

Suboxone: 5 Secrets to Success

Research shows that opioid substitution therapy (methadone and Suboxone) is superior to all other forms of detoxification on outcomes such as decreasing drug use and sticking with treatment, but still, not everyone finds what they need from Suboxone therapy.1 Here are some steps you can take to improve your odds of success. 
Beyond getting addiction treatment you can also improve your odds of success with Suboxone by:5
  1. Committing to comprehensive treatment (some combination of medication and counseling/behavioral therapies) for an adequate and appropriate length of time. There are no quick fixes to addiction, and though you may choose to skip counseling and taper off Suboxone quickly, this approach increases your risks of relapse.
  2. Getting your family and other supportive loved-ones involved in your treatment process.
  3. Spending some time once stabilized on Suboxone also dealing with other physical or mental health disorders requiring treatment. Unmanaged illness increases your relapse risk. 
  4. Committing to a program that uses drug testing. Drug screening gets you help fast after a slip-up and provides you with extra motivation to remain abstinent.
  5. Avoiding other drugs and alcohol - It’s too easy to simply transfer your addiction.

Aren’t You Just Switching Addictions?

No, though you will remain physically opioid-dependent, most people who initiate Suboxone therapy see a significant decline in behaviors typically associated with addiction, such as:6
  • Reduced or eliminated physical withdrawal symptoms (on short-term opioids, you might experience a daily cycle of intoxication/withdrawal).
  • An end to compulsive or out of control use.
  • An end to drug seeking behaviors (this allows you the time and energy needed to start rebuilding your life).
  • Reduced or eliminate opiate cravings. 

Shouldn't You Feel Some Pain?

  1. Detox pains don’t help people avoid relapse.
  2. Extreme withdrawal symptoms can predispose you to mental declines down the road.
Some people wonder if using Suboxone to avoid/delay and minimize opiate withdrawal symptoms is akin to running from the consequences of your actions – sort of like cheating.
  • Don’t you need to suffer a bit through withdrawal so you won’t fall back into old habits – doesn’t the memory of all that pain help you stay on the straight and narrow?
OK, here the thing about addiction and brain diseases – things that sound good and make sense aren’t necessarily true or effective. While the idea of negative reinforcement makes intuitive sense, there is overwhelming evidence against its effectiveness as a deterrent – and you can see how poorly unassisted detox worked by looking at the relapse rates of those put through cold-turkey detoxes at federal hospitals through the mid part of last century – close to 100% relapse rates.7
So withdrawal discomfort does not help people maintain abstinence. The forces that lead to relapse emerge out of addiction-caused changes to brain structure and to diminished impulse control, memory and planning. Discomfort isn’t teaching, it’s just unpleasant.
So there’s no real benefit to enduring opioid withdrawal discomfort, but according to research presented this month (November 2013) difficult opioid withdrawal symptoms may cause long-term harm.
Researchers at Georgetown University Medical Center studied the brains of animals either maintained on morphine or maintained on morphine and then forced into withdrawal.8
The Results
They found that animals forced through opiate withdrawal had higher levels of neurotoxic cytokines and less of neuroprotective proteins, like CCL5. Cytokines cause brain inflammation and impaired thinking and are linked to conditions like Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s.
  • Based on their findings, the researchers conclude that cold-turkey withdrawal may be a causative factor in mental decline.
Take-Home
  1. Cold-turkey withdrawal is unpleasant.
  2. It does not help you maintain abstinence. It is actually associated with significantly higher relapse rates.
  3. Withdrawal may be toxic to the brain and may contribute to mental declines.

Are You Eligible to Take Suboxone?

Suboxone combined with counseling and behavioral therapies offers you an excellent chance at building long-term recovery, but are you eligible to take this medication?
Suboxone might be right for you if:
  • You are opioid dependent
  • You are willing and able to follow dosing directions and other instructions
  • You are able to understand an informed consent document and willing to sign
  • You have no serious psychiatric illness that might compromise your ability to comply with treatment directives
  • You are not allergic to buprenorphine or naloxone
  • You have no serious liver dysfunction, paralytic ileus or acute respiratory distress
  • You are not pregnant (though pregnant women may be able to take other substitution opiates, like methadone or Subutex)
The following factors may affect eligibility:
  • The concurrent abuse of other drugs or alcohol, particularly a severe dependence on sedating drugs like benzodiazepines and alcohol
  • Chronic pain
 
 
 

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And, as always, thank you for reading!
All the best to you and yours,


Martin Schoel,
founder of Choose Help
P.S. If you’d like to dive into the conversation, make sure to follow us on Twitter or like us on Facebook (40K+ people do).
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Richard Lewis - "I Don't Want to Squander My Sobriety"

Later this month a new group of hurting and broken young men and women will arrive here at His Mansion.
 I Have A Stronger Desire - Jonathan Boyle
   "In retrospect, my childhood was typical. I grew up in a middle-class family in Springfield, MA. I made a lot of friends in our small neighborhood, and we would play football in the street and ride our bikes through the woods.
   I attended a Catholic elementary school, was baptized as an infant, and received my first communion in the church. But it wasn't until the community at His Mansion surrounded me that I began to understand what it means to have a relationship with Christ.
   As I entered my teenage years, I was diagnosed with a learning disability. I responded with anger. I was placed into another school-a new place to try and fit in. 
   I began to identify with the rap culture. My idol was the rapper Eminem. I even dyed my hair blonde to be like him. His lyrics about feeling misunderstood resonated with me.
   My relationship with my parents wasn't great either. They didn't understand what I was going through. And as the only son among three sisters, I created a completely different parenting experience for them. 
   My dad was angry much of the time and was difficult to be around. My mother, a nurse, spent a lot of time at work. I began to fulfill my need for connection in unhealthy relationships with girls. I was drinking and smoking, and then my girlfriend's family introduced me to opiates."
A Click Here to Read More 
Careers on the Hill! 
Do you have a heart for serving the "least of these" as they seek the healing of Christ? Several vital staff positions are available at His Mansion Ministries:
     The Facilities Manager will be responsible for the upkeep and care of our 18 buildings. He/She should have experience in carpentry, roofing, plumbing, electrical repair, and drywall. 
     The Mechanic is responsible for the maintenance needs of all the automotive, agricultural, and constructive equipment. He/She should have experience with auto mechanics, heavy equipment, and diesel.
     Applicants should have a growing relationship with Christ, a good work ethic, and a desire to invest in troubled lives. Employees raise their own financial support, and we supply housing, utilities, and some food free of charge. Come join what God is doing in our community!
Direct Resumes to Ed@hismansion.com   

Do you know a young person between the ages of 18-35 with a passion to see their generation restored? As a Servant Leader they will have the opportunity to do just that!
Servant Leaders:
  • Serve women and men who are struggling with life-controlling behaviors
  • Learn to make disciples of Jesus while being discipled
  • Enjoy the space and simplicity to engage more fully in their relationship with God
  • See the power of the Gospel transform fear into trust in the hearts of the residents and staff
  • Develop relationships in a community of honesty and vulnerability 
Servant Leaders are at the core of our program. Please share this life-transforming opportunity to join our amazing team of men and women.


Click Here for more information. 
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Friday, October 9, 2015

OCT 10 CHP 10 v 14 TWELVE STEPPING WITH STRENGTH IN THE PSALM



THE INSTRUCTIONS - But you have seen , for You (GOD) observe trouble and grief ,To repay by your hand .The helpless commits himself to You ; You are the helper of the fatherless .
(GODS BIG BOOK)


THE KEY - Step 3 Made a decision to turn our will and our lives over to the care of God as we understood Him.


THE PROMISE - Ps 46:1-2 God is our refuge and strength, A very present help in trouble. Therefore we will not fear, Even though the earth be removed, And though the mountains be carried into the midst of the sea; NKJV (GODS BIG BOOK) By Joseph Dickerson




The Social Interactome is here!

Our new research project is examining social networking as a tool in recovery. We need your help!

The Virginia Tech Carilion Research Institute was recently awarded a $1.7 million grant from the National Institutes of Heath to study how social media interactions could help people recovering from alcohol, opiate, or stimulant addictions.  

Please refer your friends who are in recovery to join IQRR today!

You will be assigned a network of Recovery Buddies (RBs) to interact with during your participation. You will be able to write on their wall, comment on images, and encourage each other along the way!  
There will be assessments to complete and live video meetings to attend! You will have access to modules designed to educate you, challenge you, and improve various aspects of your recovery experience. 
Sign up today!
In addition to helping us advance addiction research, you will be compensated for your time for participating in the Interactome. Help us help others by signing up today!
This study is approved by the Virginia Tech Institutional Review Board. For questions or concerns directed toward the Institutional Review Board, please contact Dr. David M. Moore at (540) 231-4991 or moored@vt.edu.

Our mailing address is:
interact@vtc.vt.edu

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Thursday, October 8, 2015

Teens Abusing Prescription Drugs May Not Just Want to Get High, Research Suggests - Partnership for Drug-Free Kids

Teens Abusing Prescription Drugs May Not Just Want to Get High, Research Suggests - Partnership for Drug-Free Kids

Justice Department Will Release 6,000 Nonviolent Drug Offenders From Federal Prisons - Partnership for Drug-Free Kids

Justice Department Will Release 6,000 Nonviolent Drug Offenders From Federal Prisons - Partnership for Drug-Free Kids

Thousands Attend Washington, D.C. Rally to Draw Attention to Addiction - Partnership for Drug-Free Kids

Thousands Attend Washington, D.C. Rally to Draw Attention to Addiction - Partnership for Drug-Free Kids

Doctors and Pharmacists are Partners in Fight Against Addiction: Attorney General - Partnership for Drug-Free Kids

Doctors and Pharmacists are Partners in Fight Against Addiction: Attorney General - Partnership for Drug-Free Kids
LIMITED NUMBER OF TICKETS AVAILABLE

Livengrin's AMICare (Alex Murray Intensive Care) Program has helped thousands of young adults find the gift of recovery.
 
Unfortunately, heroin use is skyrocketing among 18-25 year olds-jeopardizing the futures of thousands of young people in our community and crippling their families. With your support, Livengrin Foundation can do more to fight this battle.
 
Livengrin Board Member Bruce Murray, (father of Alex Murray, for whom AMICare is named), and his wife, Ginny Murray, (family alumnus and volunteer), will be hosting a fundraising benefit in support of AMICare.

Alex Murray
WHEN:

Saturday, October 24th 
5PM - 8PM

WHERE:
Complimentary Valet Parking
Livengrin Foundation
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Wednesday, October 7, 2015

News-Impact-Advocacy
ACTION ALERT! Call Your Local Legislator!October 6, 2015

You Can Make a Difference!

A critical vote in the state House this Wednesday could be the tipping point in the budget impasse.  Funding for Education & Human Services this year and for years to come is on the line.
 
 
The showdown will happen in the House. Lawmakers have a simple choice: vote for funding to reinvest in services for our friends and neighbors and restore education with a fair drilling tax - like people want - or put powerful special interests before the rest of us.
 
 
If our representatives do not vote to increase state resources, the alternative is unacceptable. The Pennsylvania Budget and Policy Center has determined that the Senate and House Majority budget will generate a  $2.2 billion shortfall in the next nine months, ending June 2016.  By next July we will have to cut more funding from education and critically needed programs -- by more than $2 billion! 
 
Now is the time for action.  Tell your lawmakers to stand with working families and the vulnerable. Vote to  for a balanced budget that restores funding and puts our state back on track. Don't forget to ask for $20 million in emergency budgeting for addiction treatment.

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