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WDP & Shannon Trust team up to help service users to read

WDP and literacy charity Shannon Trust have teamed up to help address low literacy rates in community substance misuse support services.

Shannon Trust works in prisons across England, Wales, and Northern Ireland to enable prisoners to read using its Turning Pages programme, a unique phonics-led approach to learning. Through one-to-one mentoring, prisoners who can read teach those who can’t.

This new collaborative partnership with WDP is Shannon Trust’s first community pilot to launch. Shannon Trust will be providing training to WDP staff, peer mentors and volunteers to enable them to provide this ground-breaking literacy programme across multiple services, to reach and help those who would benefit from supportive one-to-one sessions with a peer.

Yasmin Batliwala, chair of WDP, said: “We are delighted to be working in partnership with Shannon Trust and especially to be the first of their community pilots to be launched. Support with reading will help users of our services toward a more inclusive experience of living in their communities. Literacy skills can lead to a greater participation in work, family life, and directly improve health. Developing literacy skills will give them the choice to feel part of an increasingly digital, social media world, rather than be automatically excluded. These skills are a fundamental part of how we understand, communicate, and interpret the world around us and, to this end, these skills have the potential to increase the motivation of our service users in their recovery journey.”

Ian Merrill, CEO of Shannon Trust added: “We know that reading is a vital skill, and when people learn, it can make a huge difference to their lives. They’re able to complete the everyday tasks that many of us take for granted, such as managing bills or accessing the internet. It can boost their chances of finding employment, or they can take a more active role in their children’s education. And for those with drug and alcohol problems, these achievements can be important building blocks in recovery.

“Working closely with WDP, we will look at how our reading programmes can be adapted to meet the needs of service users. We hope to train their staff, volunteers and peer mentors to better identify those who may require help in this area, and to deliver Shannon Trust reading sessions in tandem with existing support.”

Read the full blog post here.


DDN magazine is a free publication self-funded through advertising.

We are proud to work in partnership with many of the leading charities and treatment providers in the sector.

This content was created by WDP

World Hepatitis Day 2021

Hepatitis C Lead at Turning Point Dr Becky John discusses the work Turning Point is doing to help the fight in eradicating hepatitis by 2030.

This year marks ten years on from the first World Hepatitis Day and the announcement by the World Health Organisation to eradicate hepatitis by 2030. It is also twenty years since the Hep C Trust first opened its doors. At Turning Point, we are committed to supporting the aim of eliminating hepatitis and recognise that it is a virus that affects many people using our drug and alcohol services. We have a dedicated team that develop strategies to improve access to hepatitis C testing and treatment across our organisation.

In the last ten years, great strides have been taken to raise awareness and increase accessibility to treatment. The traditional image of hepatitis testing and treatment being a nasty, difficult process is slowly being unravelled. Today testing is much less invasive, and treatment is typically one pill, once a day, for eight to 12 weeks, with limited side effects.

The Hepatitis C Strategy was launched by Turning Point in 2019. Approximately two in five people who have ever injected that use our drug and alcohol services will be infected with hepatitis C. The strategy outlines how we will work in partnership with other organisations to provide the most effective services to people we support by:

  • Giving our staff training and development
  • Increasing awareness of prevention methods
  • Ensuring we have the most up-to-date ways of testing and testing equipment
  • Specialist BBV treatment
  • Innovative practices

Since launching the Hepatitis C Team in 2020, Turning Point have treated over 160 people for hepatitis C, with over 3,500 tests performed. In May of this year, we had the highest number of tests in one month with an incredible 498 dry blood spot tests across all Turning Point services. May 2021 was also host to the inaugural Hepatitis C Week, a new awareness week with the aim of encouraging more people to get tested and into treatment. This increase in activity was also backed up and carried into June, with an amazing 470 dry blood spot tests completed.

Sandra (not her real name) was among the more than 59,000 people who accessed Turning Point’s drug and alcohol services last year and has benefited from testing. After living undiagnosed for more than 35 years, she tested positive for hepatitis C, underwent six weeks of treatment, and has since lost three stone in weight, going from a size 16 to size eight. She said her quality of life improved so greatly that it encouraged her to tackle her problems with alcohol too and aided in her recovery.

It is more important than ever to get people into treatment for this very treatable illness, so please join us in marking World Hepatitis Day 2021. Ten years into to worldwide fight against hepatitis and ten years into the battle to improve the lives of millions of people.

Read the full blog post here.


DDN magazine is a free publication self-funded through advertising.

We are proud to work in partnership with many of the leading charities and treatment providers in the sector.

This content was created by Turning Point

Hepatitis can’t wait

An online event by NHS England marked the start of the 10th World Hepatitis Day, with the slogan ‘Hepatitis can’t wait’. The event reaffirmed the commitment to eliminating hepatitis C in England ahead of the world goal of 2030.

Despite the challenges of the COVID-19 pandemic we were still on track to do this, said Mark Gillyon-Powell, head of programme for HCV elimination at NHS England. The operational delivery networks working with key partners had created clear pathways with curative treatment offered to all, with no limits.

Philippa Easterbrook a senior scientist at The World Health Organization provided a global picture of the WHO strategy to eliminate all forms of viral hep C and the guidance for countries to work towards this.

Only ten years ago many services excluded people using drugs from treatment, reflected Graham Foster, national clinical lead for HCV at NHS England. But pioneering work by a few projects had helped to change attitudes, so that by 2015 addiction treatment services were at the heart of the elimination strategy. Patients were no longer alone on the treatment journey, he said, with vital peer-led support provided in partnership with the Hepatitis C Trust helping to engage people with testing and through treatment. There had been giant steps forward in providing support for people to overcome challenges and move forward, but we needed to keep providing more outreach and more testing to reach people, pushing the barriers to find people and engage with more communities.

Stuart Smith, director of community services at The Hepatitis C Trust stressed the importance of World Hepatitis Day in raising awareness, and the way the event had evolved with increased community engagement was helping to do this. ‘As the road gets narrower’ this was increasingly important to find all the people who needed treatment, he said.

An example of this was the work of Shabana Begum, South Asian outreach officer for the Hepatitis C Trust, who had been tackling high prevalence of the disease within the British South East Asian community. She had seen a change from the initial reluctance to engage, following a campaign to communicate issues and provide education in different languages and through community groups and religious organisations.

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See the latest vacancies working with Hep C treatment and testing

Today will see over 170 testing events around the UK in both community settings and among the prison population, as well as a publicity campaign where several major landmarks including St Michael’s Mount in Cornwall are lit up in purple.

Search for local events on an interactive map at hepcfree.com

Download materials at https://www.worldhepatitisday.org/campaign/

Find more information and personal stories at www.hepctrust.org.uk/

Follow the campaign on twitter using #WorldHepatitisDay #HepatitisDay #HepCantWait 

 

We’ll publish drug strategy by end of the year, government says

The government has promised to publish a ‘long-term’ drug strategy by the end of the year, at the same time as it sets out measures to expand drug-testing on arrest and make people arrested for drug-related offences take part in ‘visible’ unpaid community work as part of its new Beating crime plan. The announcement comes in the government’s response to the second part of Dame Carol Black’s Independent review of drugs, which was published earlier this month (https://www.drinkanddrugsnews.com/more-than-550m-needed-to-save-treatment-system-says-black-report/).

The strategy will present a ‘whole-of-government’ response to help drive down drug supply and demand, it says, including support for people through treatment and recovery combined with an ‘even tougher response to criminal supply chains and the demand that fuels these illegal markets’. The strategy will also address ‘recreational’ drug use, it says, along with ‘developing a high-quality drug treatment and recovery system, fit for an advanced democracy’.

Reviewing measures to tackle drug-related crime – including drug testing on arrest – will be a major focus of the government’s forthcoming drug strategy. Pic by talkingdrugs.org

In the meantime the government has announced that it will encourage an increase in the use of drug testing on arrest in a number of police forces, where cocaine or opiates are ‘suspected’ to have contributed to the offence. There will also be ‘clear and meaningful consequences for all those who misuse drugs’, it says, including community service and referral to drug awareness courses.

Writing in the Mail, home secretary Priti Patel said that unpaid work would now be ‘more visible to ensure offenders are publicly making reparations for their crimes’, including ‘cleaning the streets, estates, alleyways and open spaces of litter and other visible signs of disorder in local neighbourhoods’. The government has also said it will trial the use of alcohol tags – which detect alcohol in sweat – on people leaving prison in Wales after sentences for alcohol-related offences, as part of its Beating crime plan. The plan also includes relaxations to conditions related to stop and search.

The response to the Dame Black review, meanwhile, includes an announcement that Project ADDER – which combines improved treatment with targeted law enforcement – is to be expanded to eight new local authority areas across London, Liverpool, Bristol, Newcastle and Wakefield as well as a  commitment to ensuring that 75 per cent of prisoners with a substance problem engage in treatment within three weeks of their release ‘by the end of this Parliament’. The government is also setting up a joint combating drugs unit (https://www.drinkanddrugsnews.com/government-commits-to-new-drugs-unit/), with a board to oversee delivery that includes Dame Carol Black and recovery champion Dr Ed Day. Dame Black will remain as an ‘ongoing independent advisor’ to work with government on developing and delivering the strategy, it adds.

‘Drugs are illegal for a reason,’ the response  states. ‘They are harmful, affecting both physical and mental health, relationships and career prospects, and wider society. Individuals who use illegal substances need to know they are not only risking their health, but funding dangerous criminals who rely on fear, exploitation and violence.’ The government is drafting a national outcomes framework, it adds, ‘with the purpose of setting out a clear set of measurable goals for the combating drugs programme across government’, with an annual report on progress to be published each year from 2022 onwards.  

‘Drugs inflict serious and increasing harm on society and, as my review shows, the provision of services for those addicted requires a reformed whole-system approach,’ said Dame Black. ‘I am pleased that the government have signalled their intention to prioritise this by establishing the Joint cross-Government Unit which was one of my recommendations. I am also delighted to have been given the opportunity to continue to advise the government which shows that they want to put treatment, recovery and prevention at the heart of the upcoming strategy. I will use this role to keep holding all partners to account and to support efforts to combat the drugs that ruin so many lives.’

Government response to the Dame Carol Black review and Beating crime plan at www.gov.uk

 

 

 

 

 

Run for Robert

Photo by Alexandr Podvalny on Unsplash

Caroline tells the story of her brother Robert, and why he is the inspiration for her fundraiser for Adfam: Run for Robert.

I lost my brother Robert, my childhood friend and confidant, to alcohol on the 30th August 2017. He lost his life and it changed mine and my family’s life forever.

My brother Robert was the one I relied on as a child, he encouraged me and I listened to his every word. He taught me to climb trees, and when I couldn’t he said you can; he taught me to dive and when I said I couldn’t, he said you can; he taught me to ride my bike with no hands and, yes, when I said I couldn’t, he said you can. He was not without fault, like us all, but my childhood memories of him are simply perfect.

I was the third of three children – two older brothers and born a year after each other. As we grew up, despite being the youngest, I took on the role of looking after the three of us. At times this wasn’t so welcome but we were close as children and the need to protect my brothers has always stayed with me.

Robert had a kind nature about him, he was also mischievous and a fearless daredevil who was fun to be around. His view of the world was laid back, stress free and he didn’t take himself too seriously. One of his favourite songs was Otis Redding’s Sittin’ On the Dock of the Bay. I hear that song now with mixed emotions.

Robert died at the end of the August bank holiday. It wasn’t a pleasant death and just as we had been close as children, I held his hand and told him how loved he was, how he had nothing to be afraid of as I watched him slip away and take his last breath. The sadness enveloped me and I felt my strength drain from me. My role as a sister had come to an end and I had failed my brother. I looked up and thought who is holding my hand; I have never felt so alone in my entire life.

I had so many emotions, mainly disbelief, how did he become an alcoholic? When did he become an alcoholic, why did he become an alcoholic? We had the same parents, the same family values, the same childhood and we were given the best start in life that our parents could manage. We had a happy childhood and had many social gatherings at home, drinking, dancing and singing. It was a happy place. How then, as adults, could our relationship with alcohol differ so much?

I was angry, very angry. I berated myself: Why didn’t I realise? Why didn’t I fix him? Someone so precious to me had been taken away, it was a waste of a life and I had done nothing to prevent it. Of course I thought I was the only person feeling this way. I understand I was and still am grieving, but the unanswered questions, the shoulda, woulda, coulda, what ifs and if onlys torment me. As a family we didn’t see the signs, or if we did, we didn’t dare to talk about it. The stigma that surrounds alcoholism remains and so the secrets and denial continue for many families.

I started running a few years ago, pretty amateurish but it’s good for my health, mentally as much as physically. I have challenged myself to take part in the Great North Run and I want to finish in under two and a half hours. I don’t normally run for charity but through this prestigious event I want to raise money to help the families of addicts that are left behind with only their precious memories of loved ones.

I will be running for them and for my brother Robert and when I say I can’t go on, he will say, yes you can.

You can contribute to Caroline’s fundraiser for Adfam in memory of her brother Robert via her JustGiving page.

Read the full blog post here.


DDN magazine is a free publication self-funded through advertising.

We are proud to work in partnership with many of the leading charities and treatment providers in the sector.

This content was created by Adfam.

When will racism meet its match?

Photo by Arthur Edelmans on Unsplash

Simone James, national director of equality, diversity and inclusion at Change Grow Live, reflects on the racism that followed the Euro 2020 final, and its impact on the organisation’s staff, volunteers, and service users.

I am not a football fan, but with a game as big as the Euro 2020 final, I’m all over it. I was excited about the game, proud to be black British, especially considering the make-up of the squad, how well our team had done, and the unity I saw leading up to the match. Then we lost.

As soon as Marcus Rashford, Jadon Sancho, and Bukayo Saka missed their penalties, my heart broke because I knew what was about to transpire. I woke up Monday morning, checked social media, listened to LBC, and put the news on. Sure enough, racism at its finest.

I was expecting the worst, but some of what I saw disgusted me. I felt low, angry, and embarrassed to be British, as I‘m sure lots of people across the country did. Friends and family started reaching out to me, sharing what they had seen, and I find it difficult to even describe some of the messages they shared.

I’ve been in my new role as national director of equality diversity and inclusion for six weeks now, and this felt like an important moment that needed a response. I started to reflect on how all this might be impacting our staff, volunteers, and service users. How are people feeling at work? Do they feel safe? Are they, like me, feeling drained, depressed and disappointed? My next question was: how do I reach out to people, what support do they need?

I decided to check in with some colleagues to see how they were doing. I had some good conversations with people who shared their feelings and experiences, and I wanted to take this opportunity to tell you what they said:

“I went to do a home visit and felt anxious when I saw a football flag at the window… I didn’t know what to expect.”

“I feel anxious where I live, I don’t feel safe… This is bringing back the trauma of when I first moved to this area as a child, seeing the word N…. sprayed over our car. I haven’t felt this way for years.”

“A young mixed-race person I work with aspires to play football professionally… she’s very low about this and I’m struggling to be positive.”

“I’m the only person of colour in my team, but they have been so supportive by just checking in and allowing me to speak about how I am feeling. I feel safe here.”

Read the full blog post here.


DDN magazine is a free publication self-funded through advertising.

We are proud to work in partnership with many of the leading charities and treatment providers in the sector.

This content was created by Change Grow Live

Clubbers warned to pace themselves as venues reopen

A new harm reduction campaign by drug safety organisation The Loop in partnership with the Metro newspaper is warning clubbers to stay safe as venues open after 18 months of lockdown restrictions.

nighclub
Clubbers are being urged to pace themselves and not ‘make up for lost time’

‘High Alert’ is urging people to pace themselves and not ‘make up for lost time’ by taking more drugs than they otherwise would have, especially as their tolerance may be reduced. 

The campaign is urging people to ‘Go slow, stay low’, and avoid taking entire ecstasy pills. According to EMCDDA’s recent European drug report the MDMA content of ecstasy tablets remains high, along with purity levels of MDMA powder, with The Loop issuing warnings about pills containing three or four times the common adult dose of MDMA. 

‘High-strength drugs are one of the main factors behind an increase in drug overdoses and deaths for “party drugs”,’ the campaign states, adding that there is ‘good reason’ to think that there will still be a number of these drugs in circulation over the summer. ‘At a time of high-strength drugs it is particularly important to start with smaller amounts,’ it says. ‘Remember, you can always take more of a drug, but you can never take less.’

It also warns festival-goers and clubbers to be wary of substances such as cathinones being mis-sold as party drugs, and urges people to use drug-checking services where available. A recent study by the University of Liverpool found that using these can permanently influence behaviour, with many people saying they’d become more cautious about buying drugs from strangers or using multiple substances and around a fifth of respondents saying they’d continued to take smaller doses since the intervention.

Young people and the pandemic: living with addiction

Young people sitting
Photo by Amir Hosseini on Unsplash

Forward’s recent YouGov research found that up to 1 million children and young people could be showing an increase in addictive behaviour during lockdown. Katherine Jenkins, head of the centre for addiction treatment studies, explains how the charity’s services are responding.

Substance misuse rarely ever affects just one individual. When a person misuses drugs or alcohol, it is often children, partners, parents, siblings, friends and neighbours who suffer as well.

That’s why, when the pandemic struck and the UK was put into lockdown in March 2020, we had significant concerns around access to support for young people living with their own or someone else’s addiction.

Exposure to addiction, especially in the home environment, can have lasting and devastating consequences on physical and mental health, educational attainment, social development and much more. It can even lead some to start using substances themselves at very young ages, perpetuating cycles of harm through generations. Research from Adfam tells us that children affected by parental substance misuse are seven times more likely to misuse themselves.

Responding to keep young people safe

With people trapped at home, having no access to support or opportunity to escape from the impact addiction was having on their lives, we feared the toxic effects of addiction would be intensified or increased, potentially beyond breaking point.

Our first response was to create a free young person’s online support page, which reiterated three key messages:

  • You are not alone
  • It’s ok to have lots of different feelings
  • It’s important to keep yourself safe.

The resource contains information, advice, vlogs and useful contacts for young people and children looking for support. However, we knew that this was never going to be enough.

Rethinking services for a virtual environment

Other existing support and interventions had to be completely rethought to make them suitable for a virtual environment. We advised our staff and other professionals in the field to use a phone or video call, or whatever other technology was available. Staff were asked to focus on healthy coping strategies with clients through this difficult period until families could engage in specific support interventions like our structured family support programme, Moving Children and Adults Together (M-PACT). We encouraged people to think about the support networks that were available to them, the importance of communicating clearly with others, and the needs of their family members. We also helped people to identify safe spaces in the home, numbers to call, and alternative coping strategies.

Our M-PACT programme is now going through a digital transformation as we wanted to address the barriers faced at the start of the pandemic. In response to this crisis, we are developing a blended version of the programme which gives families the option to complete 50% online and 50% face to face, supported by fully trained practitioners. This will be offered alongside our full face to face programme, which means families will have greater choice in how they engage with support moving forward, helping to flexibly meet multiple and diverse needs.

The impact of lockdown on emotional health

We now find ourselves in summer 2021. While the exact scale of consequences resulting from the suspension of public and other services during the last 15 months is yet to be known, we are starting to see some hard evidence the impact lockdown has had on the emotional state of children and young people. Loneliness, anger, anxiety, family arguments, increased screen time, less physical activity, poor sleep and psychological distress have all been reported as negative outcomes of the pandemic so far (Morgul et al, 2020). Already commonplace in families affected by addiction, it is unsurprising that these feelings have been magnified.

Meanwhile, our recent YouGov poll found equivalent to 1.5 million people could be experiencing problems associated with increased drinking of alcohol during lockdown. The consequences involve breakdown in relationships, impacting families and children. 38% of this group said they would find it difficult to resolve these problems associated with their increased drinking.

Worryingly, our results also indicated that up to 1 million children and young people between the ages of 12-25 could themselves have shown an increase in addictive behaviour during lockdown, a significant increase from the previous year. 33% of those polled said that the individual’s close family are likely to need support services as a result of this behaviour. For the UK, this would mean over 600,000 families needing support and access to services.

Read the full blog post here.


DDN magazine is a free publication self-funded through advertising.

We are proud to work in partnership with many of the leading charities and treatment providers in the sector.

This content was created by The Forward Trust

Alcohol deaths up by 21 per cent

Alcohol-specific deaths increased by 20.8 per cent last year, according to PHE. There were 6,983 deaths in 2020, compared to 5,819 in 2019 – despite pubs, clubs and restaurants being closed for much of the year as a result of COVID-19 lockdowns. 

closed sign
Alcohol-specific deaths increased – despite pubs, clubs and restaurants being closed as a result of COVID-19 lockdowns. 

The rising death rate has been driven by ‘an unprecedented annual increase in alcoholic liver disease deaths’, says the agency, with alcoholic liver disease accounting for more than 80 per cent of all 2020’s alcohol-specific deaths. PHE’s findings reflect previous reports that have shown increased levels of higher-risk drinking at home, with consumer purchasing panel data showing a 24 per cent increase in alcohol sales in shops and supermarkets in the financial year 2020-21. ‘Those that typically bought the most alcohol pre-pandemic bought a lot more once the first lockdown happened’, says PHE. 

Deaths from mental and behavioural disorders as a result of alcohol were also up by ten per cent between 2019 and 2020, with alcohol poisoning deaths up 15 per cent. A third of all alcohol specific deaths were in the most deprived 20 per cent of areas, with the North East once again recording the highest increase. 

‘Our research suggests that lockdown has affected heavy drinkers the most and that they are drinking more,’ said PHE’s director of drugs, alcohol, tobacco and justice, Rosanna O’Connor. ‘Liver disease is currently the second leading cause of premature death in people of working age and this is only set to get worse if the COVID-19 pandemic results in a long-term increase in drinking.’ Tackling harmful drinking needed to be ‘an essential part of the COVID-19 recovery plan’, she stated. 

While the findings were ‘very concerning’ they mirrored what callers to the British Liver Trust’s helpline had been saying, said the trust’s chief executive, Pamela Healy. ‘Stress, loneliness and the lack of access to alcohol support services have resulted in many people drinking more alcohol and putting their livers at risk. Alarmingly, these new statistics show that those who come from the most deprived areas of the country are also disproportionately affected.’

Rising alcohol harm had been ‘a devastating consequence of the COVID-19 pandemic’, added Alcohol Health Alliance UK chair, Professor Sir Ian Gilmore. ‘Increased drinking among some of the population, rising hospital admissions for liver disease and the highest level of deaths caused directly by alcohol since records began are cause for serious alarm. We are concerned about the increase in the consumption of wine and spirits over the last year. Cheap, strong drinks are linked to the highest harms. The ongoing alcohol duty review is an opportunity for the Treasury to ensure that stronger drinks, like spirits, always cost more than weaker drinks, in order to decrease consumption and protect our health.’

Alcohol consumption and harm during the COVID-19 pandemic available at www.gov.uk 

People with lived experience will make Black report ‘a meaningful strategy’

‘Is this one of the most important documents we’ve seen in a long time – or a rehash of old ideas?’ This was the opening question to an online conversation hosted by the College of Lived Experience Recovery Organisations (CLERO) – the first of several events to gather feedback from LEROs on the Carol Black report.

Support
More support is needed for peer-led grass-roots recovery communities

What was new – and welcomed enthusiastically by LEROs from across the UK – was the emphasis on lived experience. CLERO was mentioned specifically and Dame Carol had called for structured peer-led recovery networks in every area, with more support for peer-led grass-roots recovery communities and peer mentoring, and clear occupational standards.

The challenge now was to take up this ‘empowerment opportunity’ and demonstrate that people with lived experience were a ‘powerful force’. The policy document had opened the door to work together on ‘a meaningful strategy, not a response’. The document had demonstrated that ‘they can’t have an effective treatment system without us and that’s a massive positive.’

Many who contributed to the discussion were concerned at the distinction in the document between professionals and recovery workers – ‘I’ve been working in recovery as a professional for years’ – and some were ‘battling not to be cynical’ because of experience of working with providers who involved their groups in bids, then let them go instead of involving them in paid-for work. This had been the case with the recent £80m that had gone to providers to fill holes in the treatment system, said the head of one recovery organisation, who added, ‘but I don’t want to be cynical, I want to be part of the solution. We are the people who can make change so how can we support our commissioners to implement this?’

All agreed that it was an opportunity, and all committed to working collectively to make sure it didn’t go to waste. The CLERO pledged to use their professional experience to create clear dialogue that would inform the debate, and help to create the competency framework mentioned in the document. 

Participants were concerned that there was no mention of alcohol in the strategy but hoped to make it equally relevant to people experiencing alcohol problems, who were key members of LEROs – particularly as different addictions were so commonly linked. There were similar comments about the need for a ‘blended approach’ on mental health and addiction and the relevance of good-quality research.

‘We’ve been saying this stuff for years but when Dame Carol Black says it, it carries more weight,’ commented one participant. The ambition of the CLERO and its members was to use this ‘great platform’ to be part of an unprecedented opportunity.

Penrose visited by Bedfordshire PCC

SIG Penrose Options has welcomed the Bedfordshire Police and Crime Commissioner (PCC) Festus Akinbusoye as part of his planned visits to organisations that his office has funded this year.

The partnership between the PCC and Penrose is a first for our charity and supports the Community Action to Thrive and Enable (CATE) Project. Launched in April 2021, the CATE Project is a 12-month pilot to provide a specialist outreach service in Bedfordshire as part of a new trial by Bedfordshire PCC to provide drug and alcohol support as part of a Conditional Caution Pathway.

Project CATE will help bridge the current gap in providing much-needed access to existing provisions. It will enable engagement for a complex and extremely hard to reach group of vulnerable women and ensuring they remain engaged.

Our CEO, Gill Arukpe said, “We are thankful to the PCC for their support in providing us with this grant. It will allow us to make considerable positive change to people’s lives. This fund will enable us to work with our partners to provide practical interventions to assertively work with Bedfordshire women who are living with trauma. Due to this, they find themselves exposed to dangerous lifestyles and risk of committing crime or having crimes committed against them. Our aim is to prevent future crime by reducing recidivism by our work.”

The PCC is conducting these visits to engage with members of the public and partners. He dedicates his diary once every week to community visits, which has proved to be very beneficial as it has aided his research for the development of the Police and Crime Plan.

The PCC and our CEO had a very useful discussion and hope to work together on other initiatives moving forward.

Read the full blog post here.


DDN magazine is a free publication self-funded through advertising.

We are proud to work in partnership with many of the leading charities and treatment providers in the sector.

This content was created by Social Interest Group 

Sector welcomes Black’s ‘gamechanger’

‘Thoughtful’, ‘thorough’ and ‘a gamechanger’ were reactions of the Drugs, Alcohol and Justice Cross-Party Parliamentary Group to part two of Dame Carol Black’s Independent review of drugs. ‘It presents a unique opportunity that we must attempt to seize,’ said co-chair Lord Ramsbotham.

Mike Trace, CEO of Forward Trust
‘Spend to save [had] proven to be a good investment’ – Mike Trace, CEO of Forward Trust
‘The government must either invest or keep paying the consequences, including the financial consequences,’ said Dame Carol. The review was about ‘whole system change’, she emphasised, ‘not an easy thing to do and it can’t be done without investment.’

Taking the online meeting through the report’s key proposals, she highlighted the need for effective local partnership working (which had become ‘very fragmented in a very unhelpful way’), and action to restore a ‘demoralised and diminished workforce’, which acknowledged the value of peer support. Peer support could not be exploited as cheap labour, she emphasised, and ‘the passionate and committed people providing it need training and support’.

The Central Drugs Unit – to which six department of government would contribute, with the input of other departments at different times – would ensure that key issues were addressed. Employment, housing, and addressing mental health and physical care together were vital elements of whole system change, which Dame Carol stressed was absolutely essential. ‘You can’t pull off one or two of the recommendations. There has to be whole system change,’ she said.

With ‘problems wherever we look’, from staff shortages to ‘a huge increase in unmet need’ particularly among young people, we needed to move to a different model of commissioning – from the ‘horrid, competitive’ three-year contracts that demoralised staff and failed service users, to a more collaborative approach with ‘the individual at the centre’. Opportunities were being lost – employment support trials by DWP had been successful at getting people back into work, but it was ‘very sad the number of people who want to make changes in their lives but don’t have the support’.

Action was needed to redress the ‘very poor state of residential rehab and detoxification’ and drug and alcohol problems and mental health needed to be addressed together, as ‘dealing with one before the other is silly. You wouldn’t delay someone’s cancer treatment while you focused on another issue,’ she said.

‘Proper needs assessment needs to be done as different areas require different things, then specialist commissioning to deliver against this needs assessment,’ said Dame Carol. The sector needed to ‘start to get to grips with what is the real problem and commission in an intelligent way’.

Drug treatment representatives
Read more, news, analysis and reaction to Dame Carol Black’s report

Participants agreed it was an excellent report. ‘So, what happens next?’ said Mike Trace of the APPG For Drug Policy Reform. Urging parliamentarians on the call to make this their agenda, he said that the last 20 years had proved again and again that ‘spend to save [had] proven to be a good investment’. The new Central Drugs Unit – such as was disbanded 20 years ago along with his own participation – was the best way of doing this, but the staffing and culture of the unit would be ‘essential’ to its success. ‘It could be a wonderful thing or just another committee,’ he said. ‘It needs to be outward looking and work with the field and the people affected.’

Steve Rolles of Transform was among those to question why prisons had been left out of the remit, calling it ‘odd and a shame’. There were also concerns as to why the Central Drugs Unit was based in the Home Office, where some felt that health would come secondary to the view that ‘drug users are bad’.

The remit of the review had also not included alcohol, but Dame Carol hoped that it would benefit people with alcohol problems as well as those with drug problems, ‘as we know so many people have both’.

Treatment providers thanked Dame Carol for the report and the opportunity to engage. Yasmin Batliwala of WDP welcomed the ‘holistic approach and the case for investment’ and wanted to know more about how we could move from competition to collaboration, which prompted Dame Carol’s comments on changes to commissioning, as ‘the way money is given could encourage collaboration’.

Karen Tyrell from Humankind thanked her for ensuring the voices of service users came through and asked, ‘what advice would you give to service providers to see these recommendations come to life?’ 

‘A proper needs assessment needs to be done as different areas require different things – then specialist commissioning to deliver against the needs assessment,’ responded Dame Carol. We needed to get to grips with what the real problems were and ‘commission in an intelligent way’.

Felicity Simpkin from With You asked Dame Carol to confirm whether the proposed £190m was on top of the £80m allocated this year, which she did. 

‘Being able to use that money well is difficult when you have a depleted workforce and fragmented commissioning,’ Dame Carol added. ‘We need to show that the money invested gives us a return and will have to fight very hard in the spending review as there are a lot of competing requests on the budget.’

Deadly Serious

Annemarie Ward tells the story of the groundbreaking ‘You Keep Talking, We Keep Dying’ campaign.

you keep talking we keep dying campaignJuly 2019, the phone rings at 11.30pm on a Sunday and it’s Natalie Mclean. I had met Natalie briefly at an ACE-Aware Nation event in Glasgow where the air was filled with excitement and the possibility of paradigm change, but our chat that day was about how much more needed to be done, especially in the recovery community on the ground.

A few days later Scotland released another set of heart-breaking statistics of those friends and family we had lost to drug deaths. There was of course the usual commentary from the leadership, the usual talk of aging cohorts, the ‘Trainspotting generation’ and how basically it was a tragic but predictable trajectory. This abject acceptance from those supposed to be in charge of our care had always been abhorrent to me, but now I knew I could no longer accept this preordained narrative. Included in those 2018 statistics were people I had known and loved who had never had the opportunity to receive care that may have helped them recover.

Back to that phone call. Natalie was in deep despair. She had just lost the sixth member of her family to a drug death and her impassioned call for help was to set FAVOR (Faces & Voices of Recovery) on the course of one of the UK addiction field’s most successful advocacy campaigns.

IT STARTED WITH A VIGIL

you keep talking we keep dying campaignHaving organised UK recovery walks and conferences over the years I suggested we hold a candle-lit vigil to commemorate those we had lost. It seemed like a ridiculously inadequate thing to do but we went ahead, and a few days later more than 600 people showed up in George Square, Glasgow. We knew as soon as we announced it on social media that we were holding an event that was way bigger than any of us. We quickly threw together some t-shirts and wrist bands with the hashtag #youkeeptalkingwekeepdying and all we had to do that night was pass the microphone to those who wanted to speak.

What happened was an outpouring of grief. Mothers, fathers, sons, daughters, husbands and wives all spoke about their loved ones who had passed. But besides the grief, there was an undercurrent of anger. Anger that their loved ones hadn’t been given any real care and that they had been failed by a treatment system that they felt not only couldn’t help, but didn’t fundamentally understand what it takes for recovery to be initiated and sustained.

ONGOING TRAUMA

As we were packing up to leave many of the women who had lost their children pleaded with me to continue to speak out and host another event so they could bring friends and family. I could see with crystal clarity that the big organisations charged with our care and leadership were either asleep at the wheel or numb to the ongoing trauma we were facing in our poorest communities. We were propelled again by grief and exasperation to organise another of what we were now calling ‘gatherings’. Our second event followed the same format as the first, and more than 1,200 friends and family of those affected gathered. This time we were more organised. We had invited the press and several local and national politicians. We were amazed at the amount of people and how desperate they were for us to continue to organise and do something – but what?

A steering committee was formed and it was decided that we would create a Scottish-specific arm of FAVOR UK to take the work and campaign forward. We were now campaigning with specific outcomes in mind, such as 50 per cent representation of living and lived experience on all decision-making committees, including the main one in Scotland tasked with reducing drug deaths. Phoenix Futures gave us a weekly meeting space, extra volunteers and emotional support that lasted the whole campaign, while Monica Lennon, the opposition party’s health minister, had now established a relationship with FAVOR Scotland built on trust and the shared grief of losing her father to alcoholism.

you keep talking we keep dying campaignIn partnership with Monica, we held a roundtable event at the Scottish Parliament that gave us an opportunity to invite long-term members of the recovery community, many of whom had worked for more than two decades in residential rehab services where investment was now on a shoestring. The amount of media at our fourth gathering almost outnumbered the community members. Three of the main television stations, many broadsheet newspapers plus the more widely read ‘red tops’ were in attendance.

Not only did the press get fully behind us but their reporting was now focused on highlighting the lack of investment in helping people get well. Over the next nine months we continued to have monthly gatherings, and in particular Scotland’s most widely read newspaper the Daily Record really threw their support behind us with almost weekly articles.

POLITICAL POSTURING

The UK and Scottish governments both held summits that were nothing more than political posturing, and throughout this time the limited numbers of funded rehab places in Scotland started to become apparent. We had estimated that there were around 70 funded places but this estimate triggered the Scottish government to do their own inquiry. It showed that while Scotland’s rehab beds numbered around 365 only an estimated 26 beds were actually funded and accessible to ordinary people via alcohol and drug partnerships.

you keep talking we keep dying campaignThe usual ‘rehab doesn’t work for everyone’ arguments were muted now that the government’s own figures showed how few people were actually getting access to this life-saving treatment. Our report also highlighted other vital life-saving actions that needed to be invested in if we wanted to see drug deaths start to decline, and that it was no longer acceptable to pitch one potential lifesaving pathway against another. The focus of our campaign, to advocate for balanced investment across all evidence-based treatments, was now being heard very clearly and without prejudice by the press.

When COVID hit we moved our monthly gatherings online. The politicians stayed engaged and more and more people contributed to the call to action for real change and investment. Each of our events has now been viewed over a thousand times and some as many as 3,000 which widened the conversation.

BREAKTHROUGH

A year after the first gathering Natalie and I were able to have an online event where we reflected on the campaign. It showed us how far we had come, and more importantly that we must carry on and not give up. Relentlessly we continued to hold monthly events, engage with politicians and feed the press our stories and information. It felt like there was no end in sight and then finally came the breakthrough we had all been praying and working for.

In April we saw the biggest injection of funding in the history of Scotland’s addiction field, worth £50m a year. It includes an annual £20m to offer residential rehab to every person who asks for it. This money will not only help save lives, it is also an acknowledgement from the Scottish Government that they hadn’t done enough, and it was shortly followed by a £148m announcement from the UK government, £80m of which is for tier 4 services in England.

Our job now is to remain vigilant to the gatekeeping, bed blocking and other barriers that prevent us from getting access and choice of treatment. That work has included working in partnership with Shelter Scotland to make sure that no one has to choose between their health and their home, and to make sure that the complacency and handwringing of earlier years never happened again.

We don’t always have the capacity to reflect or even to tell you about the work we are involved in, and there is still so much to do before people with addiction disorders are treated fairly and with compassion. We are currently involved in developing legislative work to make sure that no person in the UK will ever have to fight for treatment.

COMMUNITY STRENGTH

Annemarie Ward is CEO at FAVOR UK
Annemarie Ward is CEO at FAVOR UK

One of most important things that this campaign has shown us is our value as recovering people. None of this would have happened without the support, persistence and tenacity of the recovery community. Over the last 12 years we have led the community into becoming more visible and vocal across the UK – that is undeniable, but we hope that through this campaign we can help the recovery community and the treatment community see how valuable and vital our contribution is. The time for change is well overdue.

We have been asked by too many people to write up this period of our work to ignore doing it. In our very small way this is a snapshot of a significant piece of history in the addiction field. It is written by those who laid the foundations and planning of something different to help people whose suffering demanded not only that their voice be heard, but that they have access to the same resources as the wealthy to help them get well.

 

Project 6 Training

Project 6 Training has a long-established track record for high-quality, innovative, vocational training.

We promote excellence in working with a range of vulnerable groups, including individuals affected by alcohol and other drug use and people experiencing multiple disadvantage.

Vital Signs

Our LASER accredited training courses are integrated with interpersonal strategies that drive personal, social and recovery orientated behavioural change. We bring the training to you, we provide the audio-visual equipment, resources and literature, all you need to source is an appropriate venue.

Our courses are developed by leading academics and expert practitioners in the field. Our bespoke coach training courses for families, mental health and recovery are designed to meet the individual needs of your organisation, commissioners and local community.

Subjects covered include: Family training, dual diagnosis, trauma, recovery

TD Consultancy

TD Consultancy is a leading independent provider of training, research and consultation on drugs, alcohol and related issues.

Stacey Miller Consultancy

The aim of Stacey Miller Consultancy is to provide an affordable and flexible service that is interactive and up to date focusing on improving the delivery of positive wellbeing education and training.

What makes me different from other training providers is that not only do I have the professional experience, but also the personal experience of all the courses I deliver either through myself, friends or family members.

SASSI Direct UK

Psychometric screening for substance use – SASSI

The Substance Abuse Subtle Screening Inventory (SASSI) is designed to help professionals dealing with people who may have substance use problems to identify and gauge the severity of those problems.

There is an adult version and an adolescent version, it focuses on all types of addiction including; alcohol, illicit drugs, problematic drinking, prescription drugs and vaping, and does not rely exclusively on self-reporting to make the identification.

CPD LogoSASSI Direct Ltd offers two-day CPD accredited courses (13 CPD points) in its administration, scoring, interpretation and feedback, throughout the year.

Pip Mason Consultancy

Consultancy and training services on brief interventions.

We offer:
• Training for those supporting people battling and recovering from drinking, drug use or gambling problems
• Workshops on motivational interviewing to help practitioners to prepare people for change
• A grounding in generic ‘talk therapy’ skills
• Resources for educators

Currently all training is offered as ‘blended learning’, live online on ZOOM

HIT

HIT, formerly the Mersey Drug Training and Information Centre, was established in 1985 to reduce drug-related harm and set up one of the UK’s first syringe exchange schemes. Based in Liverpool, the organisation has an international reputation for developing, advocating and implementing a pragmatic and effective approach to the use of drugs.

Hit deliver training in harm reduction and other topics in person and online.

KFx

KFx training has run for over almost twenty years, and is one of the longest running independent trainers in the UK.

KFx has worked with virtually all the major providers in the UK including Inclusion, Change Grow Live, WithYou, VIA, Waythrough, Forward Trust and numerous Local Authorities, NHS trusts and housing providers.

KFx training is high quality, detailed and up to date. From new workers to highly experienced ones, training will always be tailored and adapted to ensure that it is relevant to the group.

The aim is to provide both the knowledge and the skills that will empower workers to undertake effective work with people who use drugs. The training is backed up with resources on the day, on-line resources and back-up via email should questions arise.

KFx has a range of specialist courses including safer injecting, drug-related deaths, cannabis, NPS. These courses complement the general drug and alcohol awareness courses and newer courses such as working with older drug users.

Just Say Training

  • Training in Mental Health and Substance Misuse
  • Training needs analysis & advice
  • Clinical supervision
  • Consultancy

coAim

coAim was established in 1993 to provide a range of evidence-based training programmes to those who engage with people who can benefit from making positive change in their lives. 

We provide high-quality effective training in Motivational Interviewing (MI). Over the past twenty five years we have trained thousands of practitioners in how to improve their skills in promoting positive behaviour change with those they work with.

We are recognised as the leading experts and providers of quality Motivational Interviewing training in Ireland. We have delivered MI training and MI related conference presentations in the UK, Scotland, Spain, France, Greece, Malta, Poland, the Netherlands and the USA.

Anna Freud

Anna Freud have been supporting children and young people’s mental health for over 70 years, combining science with lived experience to changes lives.

They offer internationally respected training and conferences team deliver practical and advanced training to allied mental health professionals.

Courses include: Suppporting children and young people with alcohol and substance use disorder, reducing consumption of stimulants and other drugs, and supporting parents and carers affected by substance dependency.

Adfam

Adfam has delivered specialist practitioner training on families and substance use for almost as long as it has existed – since 1984! They have run a variety of courses over the years and their courses are regularly refreshed and revised to reflect the very latest evidence and practice.

Forward delivers Restart Scheme in Thanet to support unemployed people

Photo by Christina @ wocintechchat.com

The Forward Trust has begun providing the Department for Work and Pension’s Restart Scheme to jobseekers in Thanet.

Forward is delivering the service in conjunction with Reed in Partnership – the prime provider of the Restart Scheme in the Home Counties.

The Restart Scheme gives Universal Credit claimants who have been out of work for at least 12 months enhanced support to find jobs in their local area.

The service forms part of the government’s Plan for Jobs, which is helping millions of people across the country – many of whom have had their employment status impacted by the Covid-19 pandemic.

Personal employment support

Following referral from their local Jobcentre Plus, participants receive 12 months of intensive personal support from the Restart Scheme. This support helps them to break down their barriers to work and secure sustained employment.

Support provided by the Restart Scheme reflects the wide range of individual challenges jobseekers face in today’s labour market. This can include needing to develop their skills, achieve a qualification, improve their health and wellbeing, write a job-specific CV and practice for an interview.

Forward’s support for all jobseekers includes online support available at all times through our Online Career Centre, as well as Employment Hubs in our Thanet offices where our Account Managers help participants apply for vacancies that have been specially sourced through our extensive links with local employers.

We also work in partnership with our broad network of community services to address additional identified barriers to work, such as help with housing issues and mental health needs.

In total, 3,026 jobseekers will be supported by our involvement in the Restart Scheme.

Read the full blog post here.


DDN magazine is a free publication self-funded through advertising.

We are proud to work in partnership with many of the leading charities and treatment providers in the sector.

This content was created by The Forward Trust

River Rehab (The)

Long term and sustainable recovery is our #1 priority, and we deeply respect and value each individual that we encounter. We are committed to delivering the best possible treatment at our tranquil riverside sanctuary in Chiang Mai in order to help you reclaim your sobriety and embrace life to the fullest.

Clinic Les Alpes

Clinic Les Alpes is situated in a spectacular setting of outstanding natural beauty in the mountains close to the town of Montreux in Switzerland. The Clinic has a 360 degrees view of alpine meadows, forests, snow-capped mountains and lake Geneva. It is a beautiful, serene and peaceful place.

In a secluded and beautifully designed environment, the clinic offers utmost discretion, personalised treatment options and a path to recovery that is fully responsive to individual needs.

Recovery Lodge (The)

The Recovery Lodge offers a unique and intimate environment ensuring patient’s receive the most attentive treatment, which is proven in our high success rate.

To help you make this life changing decision here are some reasons why you should choose The Recovery Lodge for help with addiction related problems.

Camino Recovery

Nestled below the stunning Sierra de Tejeda mountains, Camino Recovery is a tranquil residential retreat on Southern Spain’s Andalucian coast that deals with the treatment of Addiction, trauma and depression.

The intimacy of the family run centre means that a high degree of personal attention is a given in a compassionate and caring environment often lost in larger facilities. The luxurious surroundings include seven ensuite private bedrooms, Walled garden and pool and extensive secluded grounds.

Our bespoke program draws on over 80 years of combined therapeutic expertise and our masters qualified team will help you get your life back on track in sunny and peaceful surroundings.

Yeldall Manor

For 40 years Yeldall Manor has helped men overcome their drug and alcohol addictions. We facilitate constructive change in a supportive residential environment through structured therapeutic programmes led by highly trained staff.

Yeldall offers: Detoxification • Rehabilitation • Resettlement • Work & training • Move-on housing • Aftercare

Western Counselling

Western Counselling offers a structured, abstinence- based, 12-step residential treatment programme. Our professional services include alcohol detox, drug detox, and a programme of rehabilitation and aftercare, to give you the best possible chance of achieving and sustaining long-term recovery from addiction.

If you are seeking addiction treatment yourself or for a family member, Western Counselling Bristol provides a safe, secure, supportive environment to start the recovery journey.

WDP Passmores House

Passmores House is a recovery community for people aged 18+ who are dependent on drugs or alcohol. Combining idyllic surroundings, expert clinical care, and social, physical and psychological therapies, we offer a safe and supportive environment for our residents.

Our comprehensive care package includes inpatient stabilisation, detoxification (including the capacity to undertake extremely complex cases), and a residential rehab programme that runs for either 12 or 24 weeks. Longer reintegration programmes are also available.

Rated ‘Good’ by the Care Quality Commission (CQC), our residential rehabilitation retention rate is one of the highest in the UK (85%) and our inpatient detoxification completion rates are 90%.

UKAT

Our purpose is to provide excellent care and treatment to enable all those suffering from addictive disorders to achieve a goal of life-long recovery. Our treatment centres provide comfortable and well-maintained accommodation and we have successfully treated hundreds of people affected by the negative impact of addiction. We treat addiction as an illness not a life choice and ensure that all our practitioners are highly trained and motivated to enable individuals to embark on a life changing process.

Turning Point Smithfield Detox Service

Smithfield Detox Service is a purpose built 22 bed specialist in-patient detoxification unit, located in Man- chester City Centre, for adults of 18 years and over who wish to address their substance misuse and recovery within a specialist safe and supportive environment.

Trevi House

Trevi House is a truly unique mother and child rehab. We have 25 years experience of helping families to recover from drug addiction. Based in Plymouth, we can accommodate mothers with their children from babies through to school age. We are also able to support pregnant women. Our new extensive free aftercare service is able to offer support with relocation.

Secure site, CCTV monitored • High quality accommodation • 24-hour staff cover • Maternal detox • Therapeutic groupwork programme • Input from clinical psychologist • Specialist on site nursery with sensory room (Ofsted registered) • Comprehensive progress reports • Individually tailored packages of care.

Rated Good by CQC 2019 with Outstanding for caring and Outstanding for responsive.

Tom Harrison House

Tom Harrison House is a specialist facility providing an addiction recovery programme exclusively to military veterans, reservists, serving personnel, and their families.

The primary programme runs over a 12-week period, and includes a diverse range of recovery-focused activities and therapeutic groups, as well as individual sessions and family work. We provide supported accommodation in a dedicated recovery house. A second stage is available, providing a stepping stone between primary care and a return to independent living.

Working in close partnership with Mersey Care NHS Trust and The Royal British Legion, we also support clients through pre-admission detoxification and post-programme reintegration.

THOMAS Witton Bank (Charity)

THOMAS delivers a range of holistic recovery focused services, which take people from within prison or hospital, through detox and residential rehabilitation into community based provision. We offer drop in facilities, assertive outreach, recovery programmes incorporating cognitive, social and interpersonal approaches, and support with wider issues associated with addiction.

We provide residential provision, support for those living in their own homes and community-based programmes. We currently operate in Blackburn with Darwen and Salford and take the majority of our referrals from across the North West. For our residential rehabilitation unit in Blackburn, we accept referrals from across the country.

StreetScene Addiction Recovery Ltd

StreetScene addiction rehabilitation centres offer inpatient residential care and outpatient (day programme) aftercare treatment for patients suffering from drug addiction enabling the patient to be free from their current living circumstances and dangers of relapse whilst detoxing and receiving treatment. At our drug rehab centres, we focus on patient care, concern and respect for the dignity of the client suffering from addiction.

Steps Together

Steps Together Rehab is an exclusive private residential clinic, set in a beautiful tranquil location in Nottinghamshire. It is the perfect place for detox, alcohol and drug addiction rehabilitation and aftercare. Our team consists of some of the UK’s most experienced and qualified practitioners.

Interventions available.

StepbyStep Recovery

As a private residential clinic, we provide a safe, confidential and supportive environment for those affected by addiction, initiating their road to recovery – one step at a time.

Through our person-centred and responsive approach – we focus everything we do around each unique individual, helping them to make better and informed choices for now and the future.

St Anne’s Community Services

We are proud to support people with learning disabilities, mental health, substance misuse and homelessness issues and to help them achieve their aspirations.

We provide housing- and accommodation-based support in partnership with other housing providers and deliver a range of community-based services across the North of England.

Much of our work is undertaken in partnership with local authority adult social care departments, clinical commissioning groups and community safety partnerships

Start2Stop Ltd

Start2Stop is a leading London private sector provider of addiction treatment. We have been offering outpatient treatment for people with binge-pattern addiction problems since 2010. Since 2012, we have been providing residential secondary and tertiary treatment.

At Start2Stop we believe that everyone with an addiction problem has an intrinsic motivation to change and the ability to do so. However, because we understand addiction to be a chronic relapsing illness that causes multi-dimensional problems, we know that this will take time.

Start2Stop’s philosophy is therefore that for rehab to work best, treatment must be long-term, holistic, gentle and with the provision of genuine pathways to sustainable and happy recovery.

Somewhere House

We are a residential rehabilitation centre in Somerset for those seeking help with their drug, alcohol, gambling and eating addiction. We individually tailor treatment plans to suit our clients which has resulted in hundreds of successful lives being transformed.

Shardale

It is our aim to create the necessary conditions for all service users to recover from their dependency to a given substance. We aspire to facilitate positive, healthy recovery, along with all service users maintaining their individuality throughout their stay and beyond.

Taylor House was purchased in early 2013 and following a £180,000 refurbishment programme it was opened to our first programme participants in May 2013. The programme provides 36 places for individuals with a history of substance misuse including alcohol, illicit, prescribed, and other mood altering substances.

Sefton Park

Located in a Grade II listed building close to the beach, Sefton Park is a specialist private rehab and one of the leading addiction treatment centres in the UK.

Our treatment approach is person-centred and personalised to meet the specific needs of each client.

Offering affordable programmes including detox, primary and secondary treatment and comprehensive aftercare packages, we support all our clients in getting the most out of their treatment experience.

Seasons Rehabilitation Centre Ltd

Seasons offers a variety of residential addiction treatment programmes for men and women aged 18-64.

Residents participate in an integrative recovery programme, that is tailored to their needs. We have a dedicated and very experienced multidisciplinary team of highly experienced addiction rehab treatment professionals, many of whom are in recovery themselves.

Quantum Sobriety

Quantum Sobriety is changing the conversation around addiction. Created by Jo De Rosa, the award-winning programme is based upon her own journey; from hopeless alcohol and drug addict to total freedom. This revolutionary approach is underpinned by meditation and the rewiring of the brain, giving participants permission to fully take their power back. Via specific meditations to first UN-learn the beliefs/trauma that has kept the addict trapped,

The programme supports the RE-learning of who the individual authentically is.

Quantum Sobriety can be experienced via a residential retreat, one-day workshop, global online programme and community, and the book of the same name.

The Dame Carol Black review is a major opportunity to revitalise how we support people who use drugs

Part two of the review provides ambitious recommendations for a treatment system in need of a boost, says Jon Murray, executive director of services England at With You.

The long-awaited part two of Dame Carol Black’s Independent Review of Drugs has finally been published and it is a candid, bold and thorough analysis of where the drug treatment system currently finds itself. It is clearly designed to have an impact and presents a unique opportunity to reform and improve a drug treatment system that is very much in need of a boost.

The scope and ambition of the review is to be applauded. It is wide-ranging and addresses many of the issues we hoped it would. It makes a strong ‘invest to save’ case for drug treatment, calling for improved Government leadership and accountability, reforms to commissioning and more integrated services. There is a welcome focus on trauma-informed service delivery, stronger partnership working and investment in the skills of our workforce. This review holds the potential for long-term, meaningful change.

We are pleased to see the review highlight the link between drug dependency and mental health. These services must work better together and the review provides a timely, welcome challenge to the sector to develop our approach in this area. Mental health and drug dependency are so often inextricably linked and our sector’s understanding of these issues through the lens of ‘dual diagnosis’ has to change. We are using our experience and insight of delivering mental health services to improve our understanding of these linkages, and exploring this issue will be a priority for us going forward.

The review is also right about the need to improve the services provided to non-opiate users. As a sector, we need to do more. We need to diversify the services we offer, which means more than just offering a mix of digital and in-person treatment. We’ve created new online advice and guidance on how to use drugs more safely, developed the UK’s first ‘find a needle exchange’ service, have new online groups, and new overdose prevention illustrated guides such as on how to use naloxone, ensuring people can access harm reduction information without having to come into a service. We must continue to explore new innovative ways to reach more people.

Diversifying our services also means designing services that are inclusive and tailored to the needs of specific groups. We are currently doing this by providing veterans with veteran-specific services, offering women-only drop-in times and female key-workers, web-chat services for LGBTQ+ and a helpline specifically for older drinkers. Though these cohort specific services are improving access and engagement in treatment, they also show how much more we can do. Our services need to evolve to become more flexible and meet people where they are at, offering support beyond the confines of fixed buildings.

Read the full blog post here.


DDN magazine is a free publication self-funded through advertising.

We are proud to work in partnership with many of the leading charities and treatment providers in the sector.

This content was created by With You

Providence Projects

The Providence Projects, established in 1996 and based just a few hundred yards from the beach in Bournemouth, is one of the leading addiction treatment facilities in the UK. The Providence Projects offer affordable programmes and a range of comprehensive options including detox, primary treatment, secondary treatment and aftercare.

PROMIS Clinics – London

Located in the Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea, PROMIS London offers a three mews house, six-bed exclusive mental health, alcohol and drug rehab facility featuring luxury rooms with en-suite bathrooms.

The programme embodies the holistic care philosophy of PROMIS and addresses the mind, body and spirit through an intensive programme tailored to the client’s needs.

Priory Group

I’s important to recognise that you don’t have to suffer on your own; drug addiction is treatable and the most crucial first step is to seek specialist drug addiction treatment, therapy & support. Our highly qualified drug addiction teams at Priory consist of expert psychiatrists, psychologists, therapists and other addiction specialists, and we are dedicated to providing personalised, comprehensive drug addiction treatment within our extensive network of specialist drug rehab clinics and wellbeing centres.

PROMIS Clinics – Hay Farm

PROMIS Hay Farm is set in 12 acres of farmland, surrounded by nature reserves and the woodlands

of the famous North Downs of Kent. We believe that the surroundings have an impact on the quality of a patient’s wellbeing during treatment, and Hay Farm offers an exclusive 12-bed facility featuring comfortable and stylish rooms with en-suite bathrooms.

We integrate a wide range of cutting-edge treatment and experimental treatment like equine assisted psychotherapy, alongside intensive traditional one-to- one therapies in a programme individually tailored to the client.

Perry Clayman Project (PCP)

As a fully residential alcohol and drug treatment provider, PCP provides affordable and life-saving alcohol and drug detox and rehab treatment of exceptional quality.

We believe that no one should die from this illness through ignorance. We aim to reduce the stigma attached and educate our clients; arming them with the full facts of their disease and helping them to recover and realise their full potential.

Phoenix Futures – Wirral

Phoenix Futures Wirral Residential Service offers abstinence based treatment for males or females over 18. The service is a haven for animal lovers with chickens, rabbits, guinea pigs and cats. Uniquely residents are also able to bring their dogs (provided they are neutered), to live in the on-site kennels.

Therapeutic community model • Behavioural role play therapy • Life story work • Full group work programme • Complementary therapies • Recovery through nature

Phoenix Futures – National Specialist Family Service

Phoenix Futures National Specialist Family Service is a unique service offering residential treatment for mums and dads to address their drug and alcohol issues whilst remaining the primary carers for their children. Positive parenting programme.

Life story work • Full group work programme • Complementary therapies • Ofsted registered crèche • Family focused interventions

Phoenix Futures – Sheffield

Phoenix Futures Sheffield Residential Service offers abstinence based treatment for males or females over 18. The service is based in a large Victorian house in tranquil and beautiful grounds in a leafy, suburban area of Sheffield. Therapeutic community model • Behavioural role play therapy • Life story work • Full group work programme • Complementary therapies • Recovery through nature

Phoenix Futures – Scottish Residential Service

Phoenix Futures Scottish Residential Service offers abstinence based treatment for males or females over 18. The service is in a purpose built centre on the outskirts of Glasgow and benefits from strong links with the local recovery community. Treatment: Therapeutic Community model • Behavioural role play therapy • Life story work • Full group work programme • Complementary therapies • Recovery through nature

New Leaf Recovery Services Ltd

The New Leaf Recovery Project is a private residential service near you. New Leaf is based in Birmingham, West Midlands and provides treatment for individuals actively seeking recovery from drug and alcohol addictions; we recognise that addiction treatment has to go further than just rehabilitation into full resettlement and reintegration into work and society.

We pride ourselves in our flexible, caring and co-operative approach to our work to ensure the individuals in our community receive a high quality service and level of care.

Nelson Trust (The)

Providing both a mixed sex house and a women’s only service The Nelson Trust offers abstinence based treatment utilising a holistic package incorporating the development of recovery capital alongside relapse prevention with a trauma informed, gender responsive individualised package of care.