Connecting New Yorkers to treatment services

Harlem drug treatment outreachYesterday, Odyssey House hosted a press conference announcing a new program designed to improve addiction treatment services in East Harlem. The NYS Office of Alcoholism and Substance Abuse Services (OASAS) has awarded $190,000 to Odyssey House and Mount Sinai Behavioral Health System to support a new peer engagement specialist initiative.

Speakers inOpioid treatment Harlem announcementcluded OASAS Commissioner Arlene Gonzalez-Sanchez, Odyssey House President & CEO Dr. Peter Provet, and Teri Friedman, Director, Mount Sinai Behavioral Health System. The two peer engagement specialists, Anita Kennedy (Mount Sinai) and Mark Fowler (Odyssey House), also addressed the crowd, describing their experiences within the recovery community and how they plan to conduct outreach to connect individuals in East Harlem with treatment services.

You can find more information in the press release.  Below is the press coverage from the announcement:

NYS OASAS Launches New Initiative to Help Connect More New Yorkers to Addiction Services in New York City

$190,000 to Support Peer Engagement Specialists in East Harlem

The New York State Office of Alcoholism and Substance Abuse Services (NYS OASAS) today announced more than $190,000 in funding was awarded to two NYS OASAS-certified addiction treatment providers, Odyssey House and Mount Sinai Behavioral Health System, to support a new peer engagement specialist initiative in East Harlem in New York City. The program, developed by NYS OASAS, is part of Governor Cuomo’s multi-pronged approach to aggressively address substance use disorders in the state. This collaborative effort will focus on reducing street drug use, lowering potential for overdoses and other drug-related emergencies, and addressing community concerns about drug abuse, including the use of synthetics, heroin, and opioids, with a focus in East Harlem.

“A reversal from an overdose is a second chance,” said Lieutenant Governor Kathy Hochul, co-chair of Governor Cuomo’s Combat Heroin and Prescription Opioid Addiction Task Force. “That moment when a person with a substance use disorder is in crisis is an opportune time for us to step in to make sure that that individual is connected to the addiction treatments services he or she needs. This program will help those connections happen in East Harlem.”

Peer engagement specialists, who are knowledgeable about the alcohol and substance use disorder treatment system, will work with Emergency Department (ED) personnel in the hospitals serving the area to help establish connections to addiction treatment and other supports after an opioid overdose reversal or after discharge from another substance use-related ED visit. The two peer engagement specialists, one from each substance use disorder treatment program, also will conduct outreach to connect individuals in 125th Street Corridor with addiction treatment services and mental health and other support services. They will also lead community education events about addiction.

“Connection to addiction-focused care is always critical, but is particularly so after an alcohol or drug-related crisis,” said NYS OASAS Commissioner Arlene González-Sánchez. “Connecting a person to treatment after an overdose reversal is crucial to getting them started on the path to recovery, and can help prevent relapse and lower the risk for a potential subsequent overdose. These peer professionals can be the warm hand that individuals need to guide them into treatment so that they can get the help they need and hopefully join the millions of Americans who are living a healthy life in recovery.”

The peer engagement specialists will provide outreach to vulnerable individuals in East Harlem, focusing on the area between 96th and 138th Streets from 5th Avenue East. Their main tasks will be referring individuals for substance use disorder treatment, providing information regarding addiction to individuals, and assisting individuals with accessing treatment. The PESs will also connect with Emergency Departments, community-based organizations, soup kitchens, religious centers, and neighborhood health care and addiction treatment providers. They will also conduct presentations to help increase local knowledge about substance use disorder treatment and support services that are available in the community. They will also track referrals to treatment and support services, and collect other pertinent data to assess the efficacy of the project. NYS OASAS will oversee the initiative.

Dr. Peter Provet, President of Odyssey House, said, “When a community works together to fight drug abuse, individual lives are saved and everyone’s lives are improved. Local partners armed with local knowledge who share a commitment to the neighborhood they live and work in are an essential part of the glue that keeps families together, the streets safe, and businesses and neighborhoods thriving. I am proud to partner with NYS OASAS and Mount Sinai Behavioral Health System on this essential street outreach initiative that extends awareness of treatment services to people in need throughout East Harlem. The peer engagement specialists who will lead this effort understand the importance of reaching people before they overdose because, even with the increased prevalence of naloxone (the opioid reversal medication), emergency services, treatment providers, and hospital detox centers, cannot reach everyone in time to avoid a tragic death. This initiative is a big step forward in protecting the health of New Yorkers struggling with addiction.”

“Mount Sinai is proud to partner with OASAS and Odyssey House in this important initiative,” said Sabina Lim, MD, MPH, Vice President and Chief of Strategy, Behavioral Health, Mount Sinai Health System. “Peer professionals have a critical and invaluable role in the path to recovery for people with substance use disorders. They provide meaningful and proactive connections for people with substance use disorders at a critical time. Effective intervention when the potential for change may be at its greatest will help improve access and continuity of care to treatment and support services. We look forward to working more closely with our partners, to help make a substantive impact in the lives of people with substance use disorders in the communities we serve.”

“The peer engagement specialist initiative is an important step towards combating the substance use disorders that are becoming all too common,” said New York State Senator José M. Serrano. “This important program will allow drug prevention and recovery resources to be readily available, help these individuals remain on a healthy track, and educate the community on the dangers of drug addiction. Many thanks to the New York State Office of Alcoholism and Substance Abuse Services for recognizing the seriousness of this issue, and providing a crucial step to recovery.”

“The OASAS Peer Engagement program represents the type of creative and effective effort necessary to address the challenges created by street drug use,” Assemblymember Robert J. Rodriguez. “This important initiative will help connect those in need with the services necessary to get them into recovery and reduce the number of overdoses on our streets. I am proud to have been an integral part in securing the support necessary to see this program come to fruition. I salute and congratulate Commissioner Sanchez and the staff of OASAS on the program launch today.”

“Substance abuse has become a crisis throughout the country, and addiction prevention services are some of the most vital programs we can offer in the fight to stave off this public health epidemic,” said New York City Council Speaker Melissa Mark-Viverito. “Drug-related emergencies affect our communities and fill our medical centers at an unsustainable rate, and by meeting them at their level by providing peer engagement specialists both in the hospital and on the ground, we can work to ensure that outreach is targeted to the places where it will be most effective. This is a problem that has been felt in El Barrio/East Harlem and around the city, and I applaud OASAS for collaborating with residents to solve this critical issue.”

New Yorkers struggling with an addiction, or whose loved ones are struggling, can find help and hope by calling the state’s toll-free, 24-hour, 7-day-a-week HOPEline at 1-877-8-HOPENY (1-877-846-7369) or by texting HOPENY (Short Code 467369). Available addiction treatment including crisis/detox, inpatient, community residence, or outpatient care can be found using the NYS OASAS Treatment Availability Dashboard at FindAddictionTreatment.ny.gov or through the Access Treatment page on the NYS OASAS website. Visit the #CombatAddiction web pages at oasas.ny.gov/CombatAddiction to learn more about how you can help to #CombatAddiction in your community. Visit www.combatheroin.ny.gov for more information on addressing heroin and prescription opioid abuse, including a Kitchen Table Tool Kit to help start the conversation about the warning signs of addiction and where to get help. For tools to use in talking to a young person about preventing alcohol or drug use, visit the State’s Talk2Prevent website.

New Odyssey House Peer Mentoring Program Targets Parolee Recidivism

OdysseyHouse has been awarded a two-year, $300,000 grant from the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) to implement a pre- and post-release mentoring and recovery program for parolees at the Edgecombe Correctional Facility (ECF) in Northern Manhattan. The program builds on the successful peer-mentoring model Odyssey House provides as part of its outpatient services and the intensive 45-day in-prison treatment program it currently operates at ECF for technical violators of parole.

The new mentoring program will provide services for up to 200 parolees and create a bridge from prison to community living during the critical re-entry period when many inmates are at risk of relapse.

Since the ECF program was established in 2008 through a joint effort with New York State Office of Alcoholism and Substance Abuse Services (OASAS), New York State Department of Corrections (DOCS), New York State Division of Parole, and Odyssey House, more than 3,660 inmates have participated in a holistic program designed to reduce recidivism and dependence on alcohol and/or drugs. An estimated 80 percent of state prison inmates have histories of drug or alcohol abuse, and approximately two-thirds of offenders in re-entry are re-arrested within three years of release, with 52 percent returning to prison for a technical violation or a new crime.

As part of the Edgecombe Peer Mentoring Program (EPMP), Odyssey House counseling advocates, who are Credentialed Alcoholism and Substance Abuse Counselors, will work on-site at the prison to provide group recovery services. These groups will enhance treatment services currently offered by Odyssey House to assist inmates in creating a crucial support network that will be in place as they leave prison. This approach will provide a seamless continuum of service for parolees by linking them to a network of peer mentors who will serve as their recovery coaches as they adjust to sober lifestyles in their communities. The post-release component will be provided by volunteer recovery coaches consisting of individuals who have completed treatment and are in sustained recovery. All peer mentors will have received training in evidence-based programs including: Recovery Coaching; Thinking for Change; and Motivational Enhancement Therapy.

Dr. Peter Provet, president and CEO of Odyssey House, said he was excited to be partnering with the Department of Justice and NYS agencies in this innovative program that directs resources at reducing recidivism. “We know we can break the cycle of addiction and incarceration when treatment, law enforcement, and criminal justice agencies work together to provide real alternatives that help people with substance use disorders find a new way of living that supports recovery, offers work and life skills, and protects against relapse and recidivism.”

Treatment and Housing: A Seamless Service Model for High Need Populations

BEHAVIORAL HEALTH NEWS

By Janice Slaughter, MSW, CASAC, Director of Mental Health and Housing Services, and Peter Provet, PhD, President and CEO, Odyssey House

A  report published by Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health in 2013 found that: “Supportive housing has been demonstrated to end homelessness for persons with complex needs and to reduce overall public systems’ involvement and costs.” These “complex needs” include an array of problems familiar to us and other providers of substance use disorder treatment and mental health services. At Odyssey House, we manage the urgent care of individuals who frequently cycle in and out of jails and homeless shelters, hospital emergency rooms and inpatient psychiatric hospitals, residential substance abuse and mental health treatment facilities.

This ‘cycling’ comes at enormous cost to the individuals who suffer from untreated mental health and substance use disorders, the families who struggle to find their loved ones appropriate care, and the taxpayer who largely foots the bill for expensive crisis intervention services.

For close to 50 years Odyssey House has been a strong provider and advocate for communitybased services that work to stabilize and treat people with chronic substance abuse and mental health disorders. We are known for providing intensive and extensive, cost-effective, evidence-based care for a diverse range of populations that includes: mothers with young children; adolescents; senior citizens; incarcerated adults; the homeless; people living with HIV/AIDS; and those with chronic mental illness. These populations require specialized services tailored to specific behavioral needs that, if left untreated, not only limit a person’s chances of living a healthy, independent life, they end up costing more in emergency shelter, criminal justice involvement, and healthcare services.

Extending Our Treatment Mission

Helping people faced with the challenges of mental illness and/ or substance use disorders is our mission. Our mission also extends to providing services for these individuals and families in their own homes. Odyssey House housing specialists and case managers offer tenants access to vocational, peer recovery, substance abuse, medical and mental health treatment in a range of permanent and transitional living situations.

In 1994, we opened our first congregate care, intensive residential treatment program for people who are living with mental illness and/or in recovery from substance abuse. This 60- bed program in East Harlem, the Odyssey House Harbor, currently provides essential transitional services for severely mentally ill homeless adults referred from city and state psychiatric hospitals who, with support, can live independent lives in the community. Since then, our housing portfolio has grown to include a wide range of housing options for more than 456 single adults and family members who have either completed residential substance abuse treatment, are homeless and living with HIV/AIDS and other chronic medical conditions, or are homeless and working to manage their mental illness and/or substance abuse disorders.

With the support of our government partners at New York State Department of Health (DOH), New York State Office of Alcoholism and Substance Abuse Services (OASAS), New York State Office of Mental Health (OMH), New York City HIV/AIDS Services Administration (HASA), and New York City Department of Housing Preservation and Development (HPD), our portfolio has grown to include scattered site apartments, community residences, and apartment buildings in Upper Manhattan, the Bronx, and Brooklyn.

Investment in Special Needs Housing

In the last few months we completed construction of two new apartment buildings in the Bronx. In partnership with OMH and private tax credit investors we custom designed, developed, and managed the construction of a 56-apartment green building (applying for LEED certification) on Soundview Avenue and a 65-apartment building on Tinton Avenue. Both of these new buildings (designed by Urban Architectural Initiatives) provide supportive housing for homeless men and women living with mental illness.

The capital and ongoing revenue funding for these new programs falls under New York State legislation to provide mental health services, including housing, within the community. With the opening this Spring of these two new buildings (and the 50-apartment building we opened in 2010 on 123rd Street and Park Avenue), Odyssey House currently manages the housing and supportive services needs of 171 formerly homeless New Yorkers who, despite serious mental health challenges, are now living independently in their own homes.

Working to Support Recovery In New York State

The demand for safe housing is also acute within the population of people in recovery from substance abuse disorders. Almost a third of the participants in our intensive residential substance abuse treatment programs are either homeless or marginally housed when they enter treatment. As part of their recovery process from chronic substance abuse, we work with them on relapse prevention techniques, work skills, job placement, and finding and maintaining secure housing. In New York City, where housing is premium priced and affordable housing is in short supply, we dedicate an increasing amount of our resources to helping clients secure housing and work closely with our partners in government to address urgent housing needs.

In the last several years, OASAS has partnered with us in providing a variety of housing options in either a transitional community residence or scattered site permanent apartments for 150 individuals and families who complete treatment. We count ourselves fortunate to be supported by our partners in OASAS whose mission statement calling for “safe, affordable housing and stable living-wage employment are fundamental to successful long-term recovery,” is congruent with the needs of our treatment population.

We are equally grateful to our partners in OMH for committing to “a future when every New Yorker experiences hope and recovery and when people across New York have access to and choice among the supports and services that fosters self-determination for living, working, learning and participating fully in their communities.”

As treatment services evolve to support individuals within their communities, we are developing housing and outpatient services that complement and extend the efficacy of residential treatment. Our evidence-based services provide a continuum of care proven to offer the best return on investment as measured by reduced recidivism, emergency medical visits, and shelter stays.

In its mission statement OASAS endorses “nonprofitoperated affordable housing, supported by on-site services … (as) the means by which New York State is able to give hope to individuals, families and communities in recovery.” We couldn’t have said it better ourselves.

For further information on Odyssey House treatment and housing services, please speak to an Admissions Specialist by calling: 212-987-5100, or send us an email at: info@odysseyhousenyc.org

Odyssey House Offers New Peer-Run Services for People in Early Recovery

October 8, 2010: Odyssey House, a non-profit substance abuse treatment, mental health provider and supportive housing agency, has been awarded a three-year, $1.2 million grant by the federal Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) to fund enhanced services for individuals and families in recovery from alcohol and substance abuse. The new program, called the Odyssey House Recovery Oriented Care System (OHROCS), will deliver recovery support services using the evidence-based Therapeutic Community peer mentoring model that includes coaching, personal recovery plans, peer-to-peer support groups and incentives.

The goal of the OHROCS program is to support people in the early stages of recovery. Volunteer mentors (who receive a small stipend) are paired with individual mentees and work closely with them to achieve the recovery goals defined in the mentees’ recovery plan. Peer support practices that engage clients in the recovery process as they transition to independent, sober living are proven to reduce drug use during and after treatment and improve social connectedness, quality of life, and self-image.

Dr. Peter Provet, president of Odyssey House said today: “A peer support system that builds on techniques individuals learn in treatment offers an exciting opportunity to extend the reach of recovery services to where people live and work.

“With this new program, people new to recovery will have access to a network of experienced peers who have successfully navigated the transition from treatment to independent, sober living. While this service is not new to Odyssey House – our alumnae group has long offered valuable support to people leaving treatment – the additional resources afforded by this grant, such as a paid stipend, will help us recruit and keep individuals who have a lot to offer. Treatment is already a bargain compared to the significant costs attributed to untreated addiction, from loss of income, increased use of social and medical services, and the high price of criminal justice services. By extending our services with this low-cost recovery network we will provide the taxpayer with even greater savings.”

The OHROCS program will serve 330 individuals in early recovery and will be based at Odyssey House Outpatient Services, 953 Southern Blvd., Bronx, New York.

Residential Drug Treatment for Mothers Shows More Promise Than the War on Drugs

The American Prospect Online By Melissa Paige McNamara

Brandy was crawling on the floor near her mother’s feet, dressed in her new denim jumper with tightly braided pigtails framing her dimpled face. Her smile hid any sign that in her nine months, Brandy has already been to jail, to a methadone clinic, and shuttled between three homes.

Brandy was just four months old when her mother, Cheryl, checked into Odyssey House. (Both names are pseudonyms.) Thirty-six years old and African-American, Cheryl was typical in age and race to the other Odyssey House mothers. And, like most of the mothers in Odyssey House’s Mother and Child program, Cheryl resisted treatment until she had little choice.

Cheryl was a mother and a department store saleswoman “making good money and never missing work” before her boyfriend encouraged her to smoke heroin “to escape, for fun.” But soon, her escape had her traveling after work in Queens to Starrett City, Brooklyn, just to get a fix. When Cheryl was arrested for selling heroin to an undercover police officer, she was high and pregnant with Brandy. The judge, a mother herself, was so angry that Cheryl had endangered her unborn child with drugs that she had little mercy and sent her directly to jail. After spending 24 hours in a Brooklyn detention center on one meal a day, without her children, Cheryl returned to court pleading for an alternative. The judge sent her to Odyssey House where she would be able to keep her daughter with her after she was born.

Nationwide, there are a half-million children like Brandy out there, born to drug and alcohol-using mothers. Few of them are fortunate enough to find their way to Odyssey House, a residential facility where most of the mothers are recovering from years of heroin, crack, or alcohol abuse. Facilities like Odyssey House seem an effective way to deal with drug-addicted mothers and their children, but instead, increasing numbers of mothers with children are winding up in detention centers. There aren’t nearly enough residential centers to treat this growing population of women, and even if there were, it’s unclear how many women would voluntarily seek them out.

One thing remains certain: The financial cost to society and the emotional toll children bear is too great not to explore alternative ways to treat this population. It costs upwards of $60,000 per year to jail a person on New York’s Rikers Island; foster care for an inmate’s child can add another $20,000 to the bill. By comparison, residential treatment centers cost an estimated $26,000 per person, per year. A recently instituted program in Arizona has saved that state an estimated $2.5 million a year by diverting non-violent drug offenders into mandatory drug treatment; the program’s success rate one year after treatment is just over 60 percent. There are many more benefits, financial and otherwise, that such programs cultivate: fewer prisons, less addiction-motivated crime, more stable children, and a lighter burden on the health care system. Prisons offer little such hope.

The narrow hallways on the third floor of Odyssey House are lined with rooms neatly stacked with Fisher Price plastic toys, rag dolls, and baby bottles. The arrangement resembles a college dormitory, only cleaner and more organized. A crib and twin bed fit neatly in the bedrooms, which are connected by a common room for mothers in treatment to sleep with their babies. A baby’s cries draw attention to a pale green room where small shoes line the windowpane. A mother cradles her baby, singing quietly. The serenity of pastel-colored walls, smells of baby powder, and baby photos provide a sharp contrast to the dangerous situations many of the women and children have recently escaped.

Odyssey House is a 662-bed temporary home for women addicted to drugs or alcohol who want to become sober. Located on East 121st Street, a desolate block in Spanish Harlem, Odyssey House’s neatly manicured appearance stands out. Surrounded by vacant buildings that were once crack houses, Odyssey House is one of a handful of drug treatment centers that houses its patients, half of whom are women who arrive pregnant or with small children.

Odyssey House is a therapeutic community that offers a specific type of treatment that conquers addiction through a strict “tough love” philosophy. This philosophy makes residents accountable for their own behavior as well as for the actions of their peers. Advocates of therapeutic treatment claim the structured atmosphere provides residents with the type of environment many never experienced growing up. “Some of these women did things whenever they wanted before they came here, like feeding their children whenever,” says a counselor there. These programs can be effective because they don’t give the residents a choice of how to schedule their day.

This atmosphere makes it an unpleasant and confrontational place to be at times, residents – and even some supervisors – concede. Residents are required to tell a supervisor if they see “inappropriate actions” in the house, an Odyssey House counselor said. Inappropriate actions range from drug use to concealing a romantic relationship. Some psychologists believe having to report fellow residents erodes the trust these women are just learning.

But program advocates believe the strict structure is key to building the most important trusting relationship – between mother and child. Odyssey House mandates eight weeks of bonding sessions between mothers and their children, in which mothers hold their children and play with them for hours. Many of the children suffer emotional trauma from the neglect they endured while their mothers got high. “The mothers never properly bonded with their children, who they rarely held,” Cecila Scott, Director of Family Services says.

“I put so much time into getting high that I didn’t see what was happening with my own son,” Cheryl says. She blames herself for her son’s troubles, which landed him in a juvenile detention center. “I would disappear overnight, sometimes for days,” she admits.

To ensure mothers develop strong parenting skills, Odyssey House provides them with nutrition, parenting and child development classes. Their counseling sessions address issues ranging from self-esteem and depression, to pregnancy and postpartum therapy. While the women are in treatment, children attend the Child Development Center from 9am-5pm, where staff are trained to work with children who may have been exposed to drugs prenatally or who have the emotional deficiencies that children are likely to experience when their mother abuses drugs. Children five and older attend public school nearby.

At one Odyssey House parenting skills session, the counselor asked clients to describe their childhood, pretending they are guests on Oprah. Mecca, a resident finishing her treatment says, “My alcoholic mother gave more attention to the dog than to me.” Several women shake their heads in empathy. “My earliest memory is picking my mother up off the streets and bringing her home to get sober,” Jacqueline echoes.

A National Concern

Federal studies consistently show this type of residential program is successful, but there are few of them. There are even fewer programs like Odyssey House, which is one of the few that accepts parents with two children under five. Most facilities, if they offer residential care at all, only have room for one child. Margo Matzdoff, Director of Women’s Services at New York State’s Office of Alcohol and Substance Abuse Services’ (OASAS) estimates there are fewer than a dozen centers that treat mothers and children in New York State.

The federal government’s year 2000 National Drug Control Strategy reports that women are “woefully underserved.” According to the Child Welfare League of America, in 1997, only 10 percent of child welfare agencies were able to locate treatment within a month for clients who needed it. Just 37 percent of substance-abusing mothers of minors received treatment in 1997. “We’re proud of our progress, but we need to do more,” Matzdoff says.

Despite the large number of women in need of treatment, places like Odyssey House have openings. That’s because just 5 percent of people enter Odyssey House completely voluntarily. The rest have to be forced in by the legal system – and that system is geared more towards jail sentences than treatment.

The Winding Road Toward Treatment

Many addicted mothers end up in the prison system when they are first arrested, either for using or selling drugs. It’s a costly process to keep an addicted woman in jail and there is little evidence to suggest it’s a path to sobriety.

Nevertheless, U.S. spending on the incarceration of drug offenders has soared in the past two decades. More than 450,000 people are now imprisoned in the United States on drug charges, compared with about 45,000 in 1980, according to The Sentencing Project. More than 90,000 of them are women. And in New York, due in large part to mandatory sentencing laws, 91 percent of the increase in women’s sentences from 1986 to 1995 was in connection with drug offenses.

In light of these staggering numbers, key members of the criminal justice system may be on the brink of exploring alternative ways to treat this population. The Brooklyn District Attorney’s office recently proposed an initiative to let up to 25 female convicts guilty of nonviolent crimes, and all of their children, live together in a residential setting. This center, located in Brooklyn’s East New York, would be the first in the country to allow a woman convicted of a felony to live with all her offspring – and the first built and run by a District Attorney’s office. The Bank Street College of Education has already agreed to offer educational advice for children at the center, and the law firm Cravath, Swaine, and Moore has said it will provide free legal work.

Within the legal system, drug courts may offer a promising alternative to reach mothers in trouble. These courts mandate and arrange for drug addiction treatment, actively monitor progress in treatment, and arrange for other services for drug-involved offenders. The U.S. Department of Justice Drug Courts Program Office provides the federal support for planning and implementing the courts. The treatment usually occurs in community-based settings, and proponents of drug courts emphasize that even if children are placed in foster care while their mothers are treated, reunion rates are higher.

The Challenges of Recruitment

All these approaches require waiting until a mother is arrested. The most daunting challenge, and the one most in need of attention, is how to encourage women to seek treatment before they confront the criminal system. Most experts agree it is critical to catch substance abusers early. But it is difficult to find these women and once found, few agree to submit to treatment voluntarily.

The reason is simple: “Why would you choose treatment when you want to get high, have sex, and sit in a bubble bath – nothing treatment allows?” asks Angel Lopez, longtime House Manager of Odyssey House. Lopez knows first hand about drugs’ temptations. Sober now for more than 15 years, he spent a year at El Regreso, a residential drug treatment center in Brooklyn. In and out of prison for several years for dealing and using drugs, he entered El Regreso only after he broke parole, sold drugs to an undercover officer a final time, and eventually gave in to a judge who provided him with few alternatives other than treatment.

And, if men like Lopez hesitate to seek drug treatment, it is a “thousand times” less likely that addicted mothers with children will voluntarily enter treatment centers, he says. Mothers fear losing their children to foster care or adoption if they admit an addiction, Lopez explains. Some of the women have been in foster care themselves. Or they have family members with children in foster care, and they can’t get them back, says Cecilia Scott, Odyssey House’s family center director.

Some organizations have come up with creative methods of recruitment. For example, OASAS has embarked on an innovative marketing campaign launched on Mother’s Day. The campaign features decorative posters with uplifting messages about the benefits of treatment for women and how it’s changed their lives. Featuring personal testimonies from women who have successfully recovered from addiction, OASAS plans to distribute brochures listing treatment options and facilities to places where these women are more likely to be: health clinics, public assistance offices, doctors’ offices, and hospitals.

Another way to encourage women to get treatment is through the welfare system. Statistics suggest that about 20 percent of women receiving public assistance need substance abuse treatment, but only 3 or 4 percent ever receive it. Through an education campaign, OASAS hopes to train Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) employees to reach out to these women. One way to make women aware that treatment with their children is possible is to require all women watch a video discussing treatment options as they come in for assessments. OASAS will also educate TANF employees about the range of services available to clients. The challenge is to make the campaign forceful enough to push women to get treatment, without making them feel guilty or fearful that they may lose their children, Matzdoff explains. “It’s a struggle, but we have to dream big.”

Copyright © 2001 by The American Prospect, Inc.

 

N.Y. Provider to Start Innovative Teen Treatment Center

New York City-based Odyssey House, a 33 year-old therapeutic community (TC), plans to open an innovative treatment center for adolescents based on a variation of the TC model that will help the most troubled youths who have high service needs. this will include adolescents with co-occurring substance abuse and mental health disorders, though the center will not be restricted to that population.

Odyssey House will be participating as part of a program funded by the New York State Office of Alcoholism and Substance Abuse Services (OASAS) that is encouraging new and innovative residential models to meet the unique needs of adolescents, pregnant women, and women with children.

“We have found that many adolescents who are drug-involved have a range of [issues] that prevent them from successfully engaging in different treatment programs,” Peter Provet, Ph.D., president of Odyssey House, told ADAW.

Odyssey House will base the program on the model that it pioneered – the Enhanced therapeutic Community (ETC) model. Like the TC model, the ETC model is highly structured with strong supports and a community-type atmosphere with spelled-out duties and responsibilities. But the enhanced model is also designed to treat long-term chronic relapsing disorders based on the idea of modifying anti-social behavior. It is a flexible model that can support multiple therapies.

Odyssey House will modify the ETC model for the targeted adolescent population. Modifications will include intensive individual case management, individual therapy and counseling, and less reliance early in the treatment process on peer confrontation. The program will retain basic TC components but will allow for much more psychiatric treatment and intervention.

“My experience is that many kids in New York City who have gone into treatment settings, including traditional TCs, have not worked out there,” said Provet. “There are not a lot of programs specially tailored to serve very troubled kids.”

Services will also include group counseling, family therapy, education, vocational services, medical treatment and referrals. The center will house 16 adolescents for up to 18 months.

Odyssey House will receive $1.3 million from OASAS. The grant includes capital dollars for purchasing a building. Odyssey House is one of eight providers that have thus far received grant awards under the program. Programs are limited to 16 beds each.

“Many people may have seen that [16 bed limitation] as limiting – we saw it as a strength,” said Provet. “We could design a small family-like setting with warmth, dignity, compassion, structure and responsibility for these kinds of kids – we could work with them in a very specialized way,” said Provet.

Erikson model

Provet said that troubled children need a small, highly-structured family-like environment with professionals to really engage them. The center will use a program model based on Erik Erikson’s psychosocial stages of growth and development.

The psychosocial model encourages adolescents to revisit parts of their childhood and find resolution through peer groups, individual counseling and therapy. Through the Erikson model, adolescents’ progress will be monitored through four stages: basic trust vs. basic mistrust; autonomy vs. shame and doubt; initiative vs. guild; and industry vs. inferiority.

“Looking at adolescents through this model, we can use these [stages] as central principles that adolescents need to be guided by,” said Provet.

Odyssey House will eventually develop a research protocol to determine the effectiveness of their program, probably working with the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA). Provet said the goal is to develop a replicable model.

Part of a bigger program

Under this initiative, OASAS is encouraging new and innovative residential models to develop a comprehensive continuum of care that meets the unique needs of adolescents, pregnant women, and women with children. OASAS is funding 100 beds statewide, of which Odyssey House will comprise 16.