Sunday, January 22, 2017

The Addicts Mom would like to introduce our newest Featured Writer Frank Cilurso, Principals Recovery Center.
NOT YOUR TYPICAL ADDICTION STORY: AN ADDICT'S CHILD
Frank is also a TAM Admin in our group, The Addict's Child. As I sit and write this, I ask myself "why has it taken so long to share my story?" The answer is simple: It's easier to hide our past then it is to share it. The beginning of my story may not seem so special, but what makes my story worth sharing is how it ends. Like many, I was born into an Irish/Italian Family with a serious track record of alcohol and drug abuse. The first family wedding I was old enough to remember involved my Irish family fighting another family at a local park, leading to my 70-year-old uncle breaking his arm and the police separating us as the parties were escorted out. My family’s reaction after? Laughs and more drinking as war stories were shared amongst those involved. Fortunately for us no one was seriously injured, but the event summarized the enabling nature of my family. It wasn't the drugs or the alcohol that started the fight, it was any other reason that we could find to justify it. My mother was born into a family of six with half of her siblings suffering from severe addiction, including herself. I grew up in a household torn apart by an addicted mother and a father who, although dedicated, could not comprehend that addiction was a disease. My parent’s relationship grew in toxicity as the years went on, while my mother’s addiction grabbed ahold of our family. I remember going through my room, closets, and backyards to try and find my mother’s "stash" to avoid my father finding them and kicking her out of the house again. One morning as I got ready to hop on the bus for school, I noticed my mother’s Black Toyota Camry wedged into a snow plow from the previous night with my mother nowhere to be found. It was another night of drinking followed by yet another disappearance as we waited for her to return. It’s difficult to put into words the feeling of a child who lived each day terrified of whether or not his mother is alive, and equally terrified for the chaos that would ensue when she eventually came home. One day, a teacher asked me to bring in an item that meant something to my parents. I knew exactly what to grab, so I ran home and brought back my father’s karate black belt and my mother’s 30 day AA chip. I had no idea I was breaking her anonymity at the time, nor did I understand my mother was in the middle of a battle for her life against the disease of addiction. However difficult my mother made my life, it was always clear that even though she struggled, she always wanted to be the best person she could be. She just didn’t know how. I was too young to grasp the concept. I just wanted everyone to be happy. I just wanted to be happy. Eventually my mother’s addiction and trips to local rehabilitation centers hit the point of exhaustion. Something needed to change before she turned into just another statistic of addiction-related deaths. My father told my sister and I that we needed to go visit our mother. We were too little to understand that she was currently at a detox for drugs and alcohol. They pulled us into a room and there my mother told us with tears in her eyes she would be leaving to Florida, not for a week, not for a month, but for good. All we were told was that "mommy needs to get better, she's sick." The next day, my mother headed to Miami, FL, where she took part in a long-term drug treatment program. You would think this would set up her children for failure- a life of excuses due to childhood trauma and lack of a mother figure. It did the opposite. Our family fought to find happiness in our lives again, while my mother fought to save her own. Our stress levels reduced, grades increased, and the silence of screams in the kitchen allowed for sleep again. As time went on we were eventually allowed to visit my mother, who looked nothing like the person we knew in Pennsylvania. She was smiling, healthy, and most importantly, happy. Eventually I was able to spend summers with her and at the age of 14 I decided I was going to leave my father and sister to move with my mother in Florida. Looking back now, I believe I did it so I could keep an eye on her, but it ended up being the best decision of my life. I attended High School in Miami and soon after graduated from Florida State University. Upon my return from college, I found a career in marketing and a passion for leadership. Many of our family unfortunately did not experience the same fate. As our situation improved, we lost aunts, uncles, cousins, and friends to this disease. Eventually, enough casualties added up that my mother decided she wanted to share what saved her life. She met in the backyard of her South Florida home with the same therapist that, in my opinion, helped save her life 20 years prior. They decided they were going to open up a treatment center to help addicts and their families get their lives back. Principles Recovery Center opened to its first client in April of 2015, and in November of 2015 I quit my job to work alongside my mother. In May of 2016, my sister quit her job to work alongside the two of us. Each day we walk in to work dedicated to helping others fight this disease. We work to help gives children their parents back. We work to help individuals find their true selves again. If you were to tell the 8-year-old me staring at the Black Toyota Camry that you and your sister were going to be running a drug and alcohol rehabilitation center together 20 years later, I would have given you a look so many Americans had this year when Trump won the presidency. I would have told you that was impossible. I'm here to tell you that nothing is impossible. Addiction is a disease that impacts every American in one way or another. What saved my mother’s life was separating from her environment and dedicating herself to treatment. It didn't work the first, second, or third time, but eventually it worked and she's an unbelievably amazing mother now. If you or a loved one is suffering from drug or alcohol addiction, my message is KEEP FIGHTING. Who knows where you'll be in twenty years. We sure as hell didn't, but look where we are now.
Partnership for Drug-Free Kids - Enews
FOLLOW US: Follow Us on Twitter Join Us on Facebook Watch on Youtube Follow Us on Instagram Join Us on Google+
Top News of the Week
Link-Between-Alcohol-Marketing-and-Youth-Drinking-Grows-StroFEATURED NEWS: Link Between Alcohol Marketing and Youth Drinking Grows Stronger
A new review of studies from around the world finds young people who have greater exposure to alcohol marketing appear to be more likely subsequently to initiate alcohol use and engage in binge and hazardous drinking.Learn more »
Help Us Continue to Empower Families:Donate NowTell A Friend
Advocates Aim to Protect Insurance Coverage for Addiction Treatment
Addiction treatment advocates are trying to convince Republican legislators in states greatly impacted by the opioid epidemic to protect insurance coverage for substance abuse treatment if the Affordable Care Act is repealed. Learn more »
Police Programs Focusing on Treatment Over Jail May Lose Support Under Trump
Police organizations promoting an approach to opioids that emphasizes treatment over jail are concerned the incoming Trump Administration may focus on prosecution rather than treatment, Scientific American reports. Learn more »
Obama Grants Hundreds More Commutations to Nonviolent Drug Offenders
President Obama on Tuesday announced he was reducing or eliminating the sentences for hundreds more nonviolent drug offenders, CNN reports. He has now reduced the sentences for 1,385 people, most of whom are serving time for crimes related to producing or distributing narcotics. Learn more »
Some People Taking Pain Medicine Prescribed to Pets
The Massachusetts Veterinary Medical Association is warning its members that some people are taking pain medicine prescribed to pets, according to The Boston Globe. Learn more »
Report Finds Dramatic Increase in Proportion of Babies Born Dependent on Opioids
A new government report finds a dramatic increase in the proportion of babies born dependent on opioid drugs, such as heroin or prescription pain relievers. Between 2000 and 2009 the number of infants born to women who had used opioids increased nearly fivefold annually–from 1.19 to 5.63 per 1,000 hospital births. Learn more »
TEST- Blackbaud Ruler.jpg
Other Headlines of Interest

Overdose Deaths From Fentanyl are on the Rise: What You Should Know (Partnership for Drug-Free Kids)
Be a part of National Drug and Alcohol Facts Week- January 23-29 (NIDA)
Watch Lamar Odom Open Up About Battles With Drug Addiction (Rolling Stone)
How art helped save addict after accident (CNN)
If kratom helps opioid addicts, why might DEA outlaw it? (PBS NewsHour)
I’m a doctor who wants to treat addiction, but the rules won’t let me (The Washington Post)
How to Treat an Opioid Epidemic (The Wall Street Journal)
Editorial: Young Victims of the Opioid Epidemic (The New York Times)
The Partnership for Drug-Free Kids Collaborates With Hearst Television to Address Opioid Epidemic
Ex-addicts trained as peer advocates to help New Yorkers struggling with addiction (New York Daily News)
Scientists to Government: Make It Easier to Study Marijuana (The New York Times)
Injecting Drugs, Under a Watchful Eye (The New York Times)
facebook  twitter  youtube  instagram  linkedin
donate now
Parent Toll-Free Helpline: 1-855-DRUGFREE
© Partnership for Drug-Free Kids
352 Park Ave South  |  9th Floor  |  New York, NY 10010
NAADAC
NAADAC
navnavnavnavnavnavnavnavnavnav
NAADAC
NAADAC
January 20, 2017
New Rule Improves the Exchange of Medical Information in Ways that Protect the Privacy of People Receiving Substance Use Treatment
SAMHSA (01/13) - The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) finalized changes to Confidentiality of Alcohol and Drug Abuse Patient Records regulations, (42 CFR Part 2) to facilitate health integration and information exchange within new health care models while continuing to protect the privacy and confidentiality of patients seeking treatment for substance use disorders. Read more
TAC
TAC
Inside a Killer Drug Epidemic: A Look at America’s Opioid Crisis
THE NEW YORK TIMES (01/06) - The opioid epidemic killed more than 33,000 people in 2015. What follows are stories of a national affliction that has swept the country, from cities on the West Coast to bedroom communities in the Northeast. Read more
TAC
TAC
Tobacco-Related Deaths Projected to Increase to 8 Million by 2030
THE FIX (01/16) - An extensive new report highlights the global impact that tobacco makes on the economy and mortality rate. The report states that unless strong tobacco control measures are put in place, the number of tobacco-related direct and indirect deaths is projected to increase to eight million by 2030. Read more
TAC
TAC
NAADAC
TAC
TAC
New Study Validates Screening, Brief Intervention, and Referral to Treatment Programs
ADDICTION NOW (01/17) - A new study from the Society for the Study of Addiction validated the value of the U.S. Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration’s (SAMHSA) Screening, Brief Intervention, and Referral to Treatment (SBIRT) programs in treating substance use disorders. “[SBIRT] implementation was associated with improvements in treatment system equity, efficiency and economy,” researchers wrote. Read more
TAC
TAC
Health Effects of Marijuana and Cannabis-Derived Products Presented in New Report
EUREKALERT! (01/12) - A new report from the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine offers a rigorous review of scientific research published since 1999 about what is known about the health impacts of cannabis and cannabis-derived products - such as marijuana and active chemical compounds known as cannabinoids - ranging from their therapeutic effects to their risks for causing certain cancers, diseases, mental health disorders, and injuries. Read more
Further reading:
TAC
TAC
National VA Effort Reduced Risky Opioid Prescriptions for Veterans, Study Finds
MEDICAL XPRESS (01/10) - Fewer veterans received prescriptions for risky dosages of opioid painkillers after a national initiative took aim at reducing high doses and potentially dangerous drug combinations, a new study finds. Read more
NAADACNew Adult SASSI-4: Exciting Features
NAADACNAADAC
Rx scale that accurately identifies individuals likely to be abusing prescription medications. Screens for multiple levels of SUD severity. Enhanced SUD identification through subtle items added. Distinguishes likely SUD from other psychological disorders. Additional face valid items to identify symptoms represented in the DSM-5 diagnostic criteria. TRAINING AVAILABLE - NAADAC CEUs
Alcohol and Memory: Drinking To Forget May Strengthen Bad Memories, Hurt Sufferers of PTSD
MEDICAL DAILY (01/10) - Many people try to deal with unpleasant memories by drinking alcohol, but a new study has suggested that this coping mechanism doesn't work, and may actually worsen certain mental health conditions such as Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD). Read more
TAC
TAC
The Power of Language and Portrayals
SAMHSA (01/09) - The old saying “sticks and stones may break my bones, but words will never hurt me” has been chanted for years from one kid to another when harsh words are spoken. But, in reality, words can hurt more than sticks and stones. SAMHSA’s Center for Substance Abuse Treatment is producing a webcast series, The Power of Language and Portrayals: What We Hear, What We See, to help change the way we talk about and portray substance use in news and entertainment. Read more
TAC
TAC
What Do You Think? Perceived Peer Attitudes & Adolescent Drinking
CAMBRIDGE HEALTH ALLIANCE (01/11) - The influence of norms on attitudes and behavior is particularly strong during adolescence, a period of pronounced developmental changes... A recent study by Eric Pedersen and colleagues seeks to enrich our understanding of the relationship between norms and adolescent drinking by focusing instead on how perceptions about peers’ attitudes about drinking (called injunctive norms) affect drinking among high school students. The DRAM reviews this study. Read more
TAC
TAC
How Patient Satisfaction Surveys Contribute to the Opioid Crisis
THE FIX (01/02) - The blame for our nation’s opioid epidemic is often placed squarely at the feet of doctors and their generous prescribing practices. That seemed the most likely explanation—until I spoke with ER doctor of osteopathic medicine Gerald O’Malley, DO. With 25 years of experience, the man is knowledgeable and surprisingly forthcoming about what goes on behind the scenes in hospital emergency rooms. Read more
TAC
TAC
NAADAC
TAC
TAC
More with Mental Illness and Substance Use Disorders Have Health Insurance
MEDICAL XPRESS (01/17) - Significantly more people with mental illness and substance use disorders had insurance coverage in 2014 due to the expansion of health insurance under the Affordable Care Act (ACA), but many barriers to treatment remain, new Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health research suggests. The findings, published Jan. 17 in the journal Psychiatric Services, come just as Congressional leaders and the president-elect vow to repeal the ACA. Read more
TAC
TAC
As Parents Struggle with Addiction, Grandparents Step In
THE FIX (01/15) - In recent years, thanks to the opioid epidemic that is sweeping the nation, the number of grandparents who are caring for their grandkids has increased dramatically, with estimates putting the number at 2.9 million according to PBS. Read more
TAC
TAC
Cocaine Users Make Riskier Decisions After Losing a Gamble
MEDICAL XPRESS (01/10) - People addicted to cocaine make riskier decisions than healthy people after losing a potential reward, according to a study published in Biological Psychiatry: Cognitive Neuroscience and Neuroimaging.  Read more
Membership Status
image
Membership Expiration Date:
Not a Member

If you are not a current member, Join Now!

Membership Benefits
TAC
TAC
Disclaimer:
The Addiction & Recovery eNews is a news service for the addiction profession which aims to give wide coverage to news and to the variety of views and opinions on all aspects of the subjects that are of interest to the profession. NAADAC does not necessarily endorse the opinions or views put forth in these articles, and neither guarantees the accuracy of the information provided by external sources/links nor accepts responsibility or liability for any consequences arising from the use of such data.
shadow
Table of Contents
image
-New Rule Improves the Exchange of Medical Information that Protects Privacy
-Inside a Killer Drug Epidemic: A Look at America’s Opioid Crisis
-Tobacco-Related Deaths to Increase to 8 Million
-New Study Validates SBRIT
-Health Effects of Marijuana Presented in New Report
-National VA Effort Reduced Risky Opioid Prescriptions for Veterans
-Alcohol and Memory: Drinking To Forget May Hurt Sufferers of PTSD
-The Power of Language and Portrayals
-Perceived Peer Attitudes & Adolescent Drinking
-How Patient Satisfaction Surveys Contribute to the Opioid Crisis
-More with Mental Illness and SUDs Have Health Insurance
-As Parents Struggle with Addiction, Grandparents Step In
-Cocaine Users Make Riskier Decisions After Losing a Gamble
shadow
facebook   linkedin   twitter
NAADACThe Association for Addiction Professionals
44 Canal Center Plaza, Suite 301Alexandria, VA 22314
Phone: 703.741.7686 / 800.548.0497

Send to Friend  |  Update Profile  |  Subscribe  |  Unsubscribe
To Advertise, Download Media Kit
NAADAC

Informz