Recovery Support

The range of services, programmes, and community resources that help individuals sustain recovery and improve their health, wellbeing, and quality of life after or alongside treatment for substance use disorders. These supports may include peer support, recovery coaching, mutual-help groups, housing assistance, employment services, family support, and community-based recovery programmes. Recovery support recognises that recovery is an ongoing process and that long-term wellbeing often requires continued social, practical, and emotional support. By strengthening personal resilience, social connections, and opportunities for reintegration, recovery support plays an important role in comprehensive responses to substance use. 

The Power of Storytelling

ISSUP Webinar
 - 
ISSUP Global, in collaboration with Faces & Voices of Recovery, presents its webinar titled 'The Power of Storytelling'

The Power of Storytelling

Event Date
 - 
Online
ISSUP Global, in collaboration with Faces & Voices of Recovery, invites you to the upcoming webinar titled 'The Power of Storytelling'
The Power of Storytelling webinar flyer

MODELLING ACCOUNTABILITY IN THE RECOVERY PROCESS.

Opinion piece, commentary
 - 
Addiction is a complex disease that requires everyone to understand the science behind it. In the treatment and recovery process, it is not unusual to come across stigma, blame, and disbelief. However, reframing accountability in addiction...

Befriend Your Brain, Heal Your Behavioral Addiction

Event Date
 - 
Online

This interactive webinar introduces essential principles and clinically practical methods from the presenter’s two recent books on recovery resilience.  We will focus on working with process - or behavioral - addictions, providing numerous real-life examples and creating a rich and dynamic learning opportunity.

Substance Use Disorder in Pregnancy: Navigating Confidentiality Law to Deliver Evidence- Based Collaborative Care

Video and audio recordings
 - 
The Substance Abuse & Mental Health Services Administration and leading obstetrical and addiction medicine groups recommend prenatal care, medications to treat OUD, behavioral health therapy, and a cross-sector collaborative approach to address social determinant of health as best-practice treatment for pregnant individuals with OUD.