U.S. Gives $590 Million to Moderna Pharmaceutical to Speed Up Bird Flu Vaccine 

Addiction Recovery Bulletin

THIS IS HOW IT WORKS – 

Jan. 18, 2025 – The money will go to Moderna, the Massachusetts-based pharmaceutical company that previously developed a COVID-19 vaccine. Since 2023, Moderna has been working to create a “pandemic influenza vaccine” which would help protect against certain viruses, including the H5N1 bird flu. The new funds build on the $176 million that HHS gave to Moderna last July.

It has mostly infected livestock and other mammals, but there have been at least 67 confirmed human cases so far, including one death in Louisiana, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. California currently accounts for more than half of human infections. The public health risk remains low, but HHS Secretary Becerra said bird flu variants have proven to be unpredictable, which is why the virus is a top priority for the federal government.

CONTINUE@NPR

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Millie Mackintosh “I’d get in catfights with women and was in constant fear of being caught drunk on camera.” 

Addiction Recovery Bulletin

VIDEO – BETTER DAYS NOW –

Jan. 20, 2025 – The former Made In Chelsea star, 35, decided to go sober two and a half years ago after noticing she became an ‘angry’ and ‘nasty’ drunk – and hasn’t looked back since.

She said: ‘I just remember a night where you would go over to a mum’s house, there would maybe be like eight of you there, and it would be an episode of like Desperate Housewives Of Chiswick where I’d suddenly be in a catfight with some woman I had just met.  And then trying to get home and can’t get the keys in the lock, waking Hugo [Taylor] up and the baby and you’re just like a complete mess.’

Millie also described the downward spiral effect that alcohol had on her relationship with husband Hugo Taylor.

CONTINUE@DailyMail

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Florida Dept. of Children & Family Is Failing

Addiction Recovery Bulletin

IT’S FLORIDA JAKE – 

Jan. 22, 2025 – Unfortunately, inaccurate and incomplete information is what Floridians have come to expect from the state’s social service agency. Abused children and senior citizens, overcrowded foster homes. Is staff overworked and ill-prepared to handle some difficult social ills facing Florida? Or is there simply an uncaring culture in the DCF workplace? A recent examination by Palm Beach Post Investigative reporter Antigone Barton found that DCF failed to live up to a promise to state Sen. Gayle Harrell, R-Stuart, to post records on its website to better inform addiction treatment clients about the programs it regulates. “We can tell you that [DCF] Secretary Harris is committed to ensuring accountability and transparency with the programs and facilities that we regulate,” DCF said in a statement after the agreement.

CONTINUE@PalmBeachPost

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Showcasing ART Done by People in Recovery

Addiction Recovery Bulletin

ONE BRUSH STROKE AT A TIME – 

JAN. 22, 2025 – A picture is worth a thousand words, but for those battling addiction, a brush and canvas can say so much more. The Allen County Treatment Court, Lighthouse Peer Support Center, and the Allen, Auglaize, and Hardin County Mental Health and Recovery Services Board are hosting a show with artwork done by people that are in recovery. The artists are finding or using some hidden talent for painting that they may not have explored before or have forgotten while they were trapped in their addiction. For people in recovery, art helps them express themselves in ways they couldn’t before. The Allen County Treatment Court, Lighthouse Peer Support Center, and the Allen, Auglaize, and Hardin County Mental Health and Recovery Services Board are hosting a show with artwork done by people that are in recovery. The artists are finding or using some hidden talent for painting that they may not have explored before or have forgotten while they were trapped in their addiction. For people in recovery, art helps them express themselves in ways they couldn’t before.

CONTINUE@HometownStations

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Kelly Ripa Shares Post-Sobriety Weight-Gain

Addiction Recovery Bulletin

IT HAPPENS, SOMETIMES – 

Jan. 22, 2025 – Ripa, 54, opened up about the subject during the episode of Live With Kelly and Mark while speaking with guest co-host Andy Cohen, who was filling in for Ripa’s husband, Mark Consuelos. Cohen, 56, explained that he expected “some” weight loss after giving up booze for the month of January but admitted that it hasn’t “really happened yet,” which prompted Ripa to share her experience with putting on a few pounds while abstaining from the sauce.

“I told you, when I quit drinking, I expected there to be this windfall of weight loss, because everybody’s like, ‘Well, you are gonna get too skinny, and you can’t afford to lose it,’” Ripa, who revealed she gained 12 pounds, told viewers.

“I don’t understand this magical weight loss,” Ripa continued, referencing how some people who give up alcohol lean out. “I think I just took to eating the sugars.”

Ripa previously revealed she gave up alcohol for good after doing a sober month with a group of girlfriends in 2020.

CONTINUE@Parade

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Person of the Week: Stevie Mack 

Addiction Recovery Bulletin

STICK WITH THE WINNERS! – 

Jan. 28, 2025 – Stevie Mack is multi-talented, and his comedy includes song, dance, audience participation and magic. He is the Host of The Stevie Mack Show and is the official Comedy Guru on Airbnb experiences. Stevie Mack known for performing stand-up comedy, and one-man shows since the 90’s and featured in a ton of TV shows/movies and over 41 commercials pitching everything from soft drinks to real estate. 

Q. If you are in recovery, what was your drug(s) of choice and when is your sobriety date?

A. Cocaine, Heroin, Alcohol, pills. But my favorite was…whatever you had!

Q. What do you like most about 12-step meetings?

A. 12-Step meetings allow me to meet new people in the fellowship, get new sponsees, and scout potential speakers for my Saturday morning meeting at Venice Beach.

Q. Do you think addiction is an illness, disease, a choice, or a wicked twist of fate?

A. I believe addiction is both environmental and hereditary. And I believe it is an illness that we are born with.

CONTINUE@AddictionRecoveryeBulletin

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Social Network, Social Functioning Associated with Longer Stays in Alcohol Treatment

Newswise — When seeking treatment for alcohol use disorder, how a person is functioning in society strongly influences how long they will stay in inpatient treatment. According to a study published in Alcohol: Clinical and Experimental Research, people who are dissatisfied in their primary social role—at work or school, for example—and people with a strong social network stay in treatment longer, giving them more opportunities for therapeutic intervention. The study highlights the importance of helping people in treatment for alcohol use disorder to strengthen their social network and social role.

The purpose of the study was to examine the modifiable factors affecting how long a patient stays in inpatient treatment for alcohol use disorder. Longer duration of stay is considered to be more beneficial to patients. Researchers collected data on 800 people being admitted to a short-term inpatient facility center in greater New York City between 2022 and 2024 to treat their alcohol and substance use disorders.

Sixty-five percent of participants used alcohol as their primary substance. The average length of stay in treatment ranged from two days to 43 days. A preliminary analysis found that total well-being, symptom distress, social role, total social network size, and alcohol use severity were significant predictors of length of stay; those factors were further analyzed. The preliminary analysis did not find an association between age, sex, race, ethnicity, or substance use disorder severity and length of stay.  

Further analysis found that social role, social network size, and severity of alcohol use disorder all significantly increased length of stay. Specifically, for each additional point on the social role measure, the length of stay increased by 0.12 days. This scale measures the individual’s satisfaction with what they consider to be their primary social role, whether in a work, school, volunteer, or other setting. The higher the number on this scale, which ranges from 9 to 45, the more dysfunctional the person’s social role. Individuals generally dissatisfied with their social role may be more inclined to stay in treatment to improve their function in those roles—or may be required to do so by their school or workplace.

Each of the three additional people listed in a patient’s social network was associated with an increased length of stay in treatment of one day. This result aligns with prior studies and may be because a larger social network means more support during treatment and more motivation to stay in treatment. The study also found that for every three additional alcohol use disorder symptoms a participant reported, their length of stay increased by one day.

The authors recommend further research at other treatment facilities and note that the study findings provide important insights for clinicians who can easily incorporate the social functioning measures used in the study into intake processes and communications among treatment teams, for example, through electronic health records. They recommend that treatment aims to improve the patient’s social functioning during treatment and after discharge, for instance, through vocational rehabilitation, and that clinicians leverage patients’ social networks to support their treatment and recovery. 

Correlates of length of stay in a short-term inpatient residential addiction treatment facility. J. Bourdon, S. Verdecanna, J. Wright, N. Vadhan, M.F. Wright, J. Morgenstern

ACER-24-6126.R2

Philadelphia Offers Treatment Instead of Jail

Addiction Recovery Bulletin

ADDICTION IS A PRISON –

Jan. 22, 2025 – Mayor Cherelle Parker signed an executive order introducing what she calls “Wellness Court.” The City of Philadelphia is launching a new program in the Kensington neighborhood on Wednesday, with the goal of sending those with drug addictions to treatment rather than jail.The Kensington Wellness Court, which is a first of its kind in Philadelphia, offers an alternative to jail time for those struggling with substance abuse. Parker says her action is just one small step toward the larger goal of ending the humanitarian crisis in the Philadelphia neighborhood.

“We committed that we would end this opioid-driven humanitarian crisis once and for all,” Parker said during a news conference.

The mayor signed an executive order that gives the police department the option to make a summary arrest instead of a misdemeanor arrest for certain drug offenses. 

CONTINUE@6ABC

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For What It’s Worth (57 Years Ago) – Buffalo Springfield 

Addiction Recovery Bulletin

VIDEO – MUSICAL INTERLUDE – 

TODAY – 70,587,708 views  since Aug 26, 2010. There’s something happening here

What it is ain’t exactly clear
There’s a man with a gun over there
Telling me I got to beware

I think it’s time we stop, children, what’s that sound
Everybody look what’s going down

There’s battle lines being drawn
Nobody’s right if everybody’s wrong
Young people speaking their minds
Getting so much resistance from behind

It’s time we stop, hey, what’s that sound
Everybody look what’s going down

What a field-day for the heat
A thousand people in the street
Singing songs and carrying signs
Mostly say, hooray for our side

It’s s time we stop, hey, what’s that sound
Everybody look what’s going down

Paranoia strikes deep
Into your life it will creep
It starts when you’re always afraid
You step out of line, the man come and take you away

We better stop, hey, what’s that sound
Everybody look what’s going down
Stop, hey, what’s that sound
Everybody look what’s going down
Stop, now, what’s that sound
Everybody look what’s going down
Stop, children, what’s that sound
Everybody look what’s going down

CONTINUE@YouTube

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Face Moisturizer Sold at Sephora & Amazon Recalled 

Addiction Recovery Bulletin

TURN THE OTHER CHEEK? –

Jan. 23, 2025 – Before slathering on your moisturizer, you might want to take a second to check the jar. 

First Aid Beauty recently voluntarily ordered back more than 2,700 pots of its best-selling Ultra Repair Cream in the coconut vanilla scent after a batch “intended for quarantine” was accidentally sold to customers.

This cult-favorite cream, which retails for $38 at Sephora, has built a massive fan base, fueled by rave TikTok reviews and skin care influencers like celebrity makeup artist Jill Powell, who called it “a drink of water for your skin.”

Fans, including The Post’s beauty gurus, swear by the Ultra Repair Cream for its ability to provide instant relief for dry, distressed skin and eczema. First Aid Beauty also promotes the cream as a solution for smoothing fine lines, reducing redness and strengthening the skin barrier. Only packages of Ultra Repair Cream with the lot numbers 24D44 and 24D45 with the expiration dates of April 10 and 11, 2026, are being recalled; however, they were distributed across the US in retail stores and online. 

CONTINUE@NYPost

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