Study of Seattle’s Public Treatment Clinics Show More Must be Done

The University of Washington recently published a study in the mental health journal, Psychiatric Services, to determine the efficiency of Seattle’s mental health services and whether the majority of addicts or people with psychiatric disorders seeking treatment were deterred based on social stigmas.

The study was conducted in conjunction with the Center for Healthcare Improvement for Addictions, Mental Illness and Medically Vulnerable Populations, or CHAMMP. CHAMMP and the University of Washington’s psychology Department, the Harborview Medical Center, worked together to interview the staff of fifteen local community health care clinics.  The interviews were 90 minutes long and asked staff members to relate their personal experiences of addicts and mentally ill individuals’ treatment at the clinics.

The results of the study showed that current approaches to psychotherapy and addiction recovery treatments in Seattle needed to embrace more positive practices and had to be more readily available throughout the community, especially when it came to the handling of individuals with disadvantaged status who sought treatment.

Based on the findings, the researches suggested that many Seattle residents living with mental health disorders and chemical dependence issues were reluctant to seek professional help due to the lack of available services, and even more so, in impoverished portions of the city.  As it stands, the problems of low funding for clinics, poor organization and a more beneficial attitude toward the person seeking treatment must be improved to ensure better results.

New Christian Drug & Alcohol Rehab Program Opens in California

A New Life treatment center, which is dedicated to Christian Alcohol and Drug Rehab, has recently opened in Southern California. The curriculum of the new Christian residential treatment program integrates scripture, Christ-centered therapy, and family reconciliation. Clients of the A New Life treatment center are transported to Saddleback Christian church for their addiction recovery counseling.

There, clients commune with others and take part in the program’s 8 Recovery Principals, designed by Pastor Rick Warren, with the goal of receiving fundamental life changes by working and employing Biblical principles to commence spiritual growth. This freedom produces peace, serenity, joy and most importantly a stronger personal relationship with God and with others. Celebrate A New Life operates at Hope by The Sea, a state certified and licensed facility.
For more information visit the website:
http://www.celebratedrugrehab.com

Featured Rehabilitation Program: Mountainside Treatment Center

Connecticut

One of the most difficult things for a person with a substance abuse addiction, or the family of someone that abuses illegal substances, can be choosing the right rehabilitation program. That is why, here at The NA Blog, we will be running a series of informative articles featuring treatment centers with the hopes of offering treatment options. This week’s featured rehabilitation program is the Mountainside Treatment Center, located in Canaan, Connecticut.

The Mountainside Treatment Center has been successfully treating adults who suffer from drug and alcohol addiction for more than 11 years. It is a non-profit rehabilitation program and has a full staff of licensed and certified professionals, trained in a wide variety of counseling techniques.

One of the distinguishing qualities of The Mountainside Treatment Center is that it offers Individual, Group, Gender Specific and Family Counseling as well as a full Mind Body Wellness Program consisting of Yoga, Guided Meditation for relaxation, and Tai Chi. The Treatment Center also offers an assortment of fellowship meetings like 12 Steps programs and education workshops, such as “Nicotine Recovery.”

Additionally, the Mountainside Treatment Center offers a full Adventure Based Initiatives Program, complete with a Low Ropes Course under the guidance of our Adventure Based Counselors. Visit the website to learn more. http://www.mountainside.org/drug-rehab

Maryland Faith Based Recovery Program uses Devotion to Rehab

Faith Based Recovery Program

Rev. Arnold Farlow, who has been part of the Maryland faith based recovery program, Fredrick Rescue Mission, for nearly four years, has been working vigorously with recovering addicts and has been able to change the life of 34 individuals, thus far, who were otherwise headed for utter disaster.  A learned man, Rev. Arnold Farlow holds various degrees from both the University of North Carolina and Gordon-Conwell Seminary.  Before joining the Fredrick Rescue Mission, Farlow worked for years as a director for a homeless shelter in North Carolina.

The Fredrick Rescue Mission is a recovery program that Rev. Arnold Farlow runs as a yearlong treatment for men and uses no psychiatric methods or medications during the process.  Instead, the Maryland faith based recovery program places its focus on devotion to Scripture, hard work and religious group counseling.  The program has a $500 enrollment fee, but no other expenses, and requires that new participants not leave the treatment center for the first 30 days.

The addicts in recovery at the program spend most of the afternoon hours working in the mission’s soup kitchen or in other charitable operations for the community.  Nonetheless, Rev. Arnold Farlow’s program is rigorous, as a matter of fact, of the 91 men that entered the program in 2008, only 16 successfully completed.

As it stands today, there are over 1,200 faith based recovery programs in the US that account for 23 percent of the entire drug and alcohol addiction treatment programs spread through out the 48 continental states, according to the U.S. Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration.

Methadone Tax creating mixed opinions in WV drug rehabilitation community

A newly proposed tax bill in West Virginia that would tax a dollar to treatment centers for every dose of methadone distributed to recovering addicts is being met with mixed emotions by the drug rehabilitation community for various reasons.  Recovering addicts are skeptical about the newly proposed bill because they feel that the tax will be passed on to them by the treatment centers.  Additionally, recovering addicts are arguing that the bill is discriminating against them because it does not tax non-addicts who are taking methadone for pain treatment.

On the other hand, the bill is designed to collect 1.5 million dollars to be used mainly for heroine prevention programs state wide and general drug intervention and recovery programs for addicts.  The legislators who created the bill argue that there are plenty of methadone treatment clinics for recovering addicts but not enough long-term, in-patient recovery programs.  This is much due to funding issues in the state’s budget.

As of now, there are seven major methadone clinics in West Virginia that are owned by the CRC Health Group, a California-based company.  The CRC owned clinics have also met the bill with opposition, arguing that they spend millions of dollars a year for community prevention and recovery programs and that the tax would only affect them negatively.  Nonetheless, state-law-makers argue that there just isn’t enough aid available to recovering addicts and more must be done to try and solve the state’s epidemic of opiate addictions.