1 / 13

A Faith-based Approach to Providing Peer-led Addiction Recovery Support Services

A Faith-based Approach to Providing Peer-led Addiction Recovery Support Services. Presented by. A SAMHSA/CSAT Funded Faith-Based Peer-led Addiction Recovery and HIV Prevention Program. Recovery Consultants of Atlanta, Inc. Whitehouse Conference on Faith-based Initiatives. Humble Beginnings.

jeroen
Download Presentation

A Faith-based Approach to Providing Peer-led Addiction Recovery Support Services

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. A Faith-based Approach to Providing Peer-led Addiction Recovery Support Services

  2. Presented by A SAMHSA/CSAT Funded Faith-Based Peer-led Addiction Recovery and HIV Prevention Program Recovery Consultants of Atlanta, Inc. Whitehouse Conference on Faith-based Initiatives

  3. Humble Beginnings • Our organization was founded in 1999 by 3 members of Atlanta’s 12 step Recovery Community • We each had earned our graduate degrees as a result of our personal recovery • Our initial goal was to develop a program that would assist others in long-term recovery pursue formal degrees

  4. EVIDENCE OF THINGS UNSEEN Ourmustard seed faith has led to the creation of a coalition of Atlanta-based churches that offer services and programs that help reduce substance use and their related ailments (i.e. HIV, hepatitis C, homelessness, and incarceration) among members of inner-city Atlanta’s addiction recovery and substance using communities

  5. What are Peer-led Addiction Recovery Support Services • Essentially they include “non-professional” or “peer-based services” provided by “members of 12-step and faith-based recovery communities” for “people in recovery” (For Us and By Us - FUBU) • They are not intended to supplant services such as addictive or mental disorder treatment programs, but instead are designed to augment and support these services

  6. Abstinence from Drugs/Alcohol Street Outreach Program Celebrate Recovery - Christ-centered 12 step support group Employment/Education Addiction Counseling Training Program for people in recovery Recovery at Work (RAW) Social Entrepreneurial Program for people in recovery Partnership with AMEN, Inc. – Entrepreneurial opportunities for people in recovery Social Support Faith-based Rapid HIV testing Program Christians In Recovery – Annual Faith-based Conference Capacity Building Recovery Month Mural Technical Assistance Family/Housing Enhancement Better Parents = Better Kids – Mentoring Program Transitional Housing Program Peer-led Support Services Provided through our Faith-based Coalition

  7. Recovery @ Work (RAW) Street Outreach Faith-basedRecovery Conference Transitional Housing Prevention Education

  8. Our Social Entrepreneurial Program

  9. September 15, 2007 – Recovery Month Rally. Churches from our faith-based coalition transported close to 300 homeless substance users to this event!

  10. Our Recovery Month Speaker - Atlanta Mayor Shirley Franklin - seated with RCA, Inc.’s Associate Director Cassandra Collins. Mayor Franklin shared a wonderful story about her Dad who found recovery from his alcoholism at age 40 and died with 38 years of sobriety.

  11. Integrating homelessness and recovery!

  12. LessonsLearned • The African American church is the leading provider of social, educational, and spiritual support services in the African American community • There is value in collaborating with African American churches • There are enormous amounts of untapped resources within the African American church, particularly among those that value their members who are also in 12 step recovery • Value of peer-led services (less costly than treatment and maybe more effective) • There is a need for research focusing on individuals seeking and finding recovery through faith conversions

  13. THE END

More Related