Addicts to Get Vaccine, Gov. Cuomo says

Addiction Recovery Bulletin

The chosen ones – 

Dec. 28, 2020 – Residents and staffers will be vaccinated at both the state-run and privately operated rehab centers, as well as at facilities run or licensed by the Office for People with Developmental Disabilities and the Office of Mental Health, according to the state Department of Health.

Emergency medical services personnel, medical examiners and coroners and some funeral workers will also get shots, a DOH spokeswoman said.

Luke Nasta, a director of the New York Association of Substance Abuse Providers, said the non-profit group had lobbied for rehab patients to receive vaccinations.

Nasta, CEO of the Camelot Family Foundation — which runs two residential treatment centers on Staten Island — said it made sense to give the shots to drug users because they were most likely “to get the disease and spread it.”

“We were overlooked initially. We got the governor’s office’s attention and Gov. Cuomo acted appropriately,” he said.

Meanwhile, the percentage of New Yorkers who tested positive for coronavirus jumped from 5.8 percent to 8.3 percent over the three-day Christmas weekend, Cuomo said.

The spike could show that a post-Thanksgiving surge in cases is gaining steam or merely be an aberration caused by fewer people getting tested because of the holiday, he said.

More certain were the COVID-19-related hospitalizations that rose to 7,559 statewide — up 376 — and the 114 fatalities blamed on the respiratory disease, which brought the state’s death toll to 29,629.

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Collegiate Recovery Community Helps MSU Students

Addiction Recovery Bulletin

LISTEN – Academia not bulimia –  

Dec. 29, 2020 – Chris studied marketing at MSU and has established himself as a business leader, public speaker, coach, mentor, and lifelong student striving to be of service to others. With over 25 years of experience in technology, he currently serves as the vice-president of US Consumer Goods at Salesforce Marketing Cloud, where he grew from account executive to vice president. Chris recently opened up about his 15-year journey with sobriety and established the soberexec.com to help others navigate recovery and sobriety. Our Collegiate Recovery Community here at MSU has been on quite a journey,” says Kepler. “From the very beginning, it has been spearheaded by students. It’s for students and by students who have come to MSU. It was approximately three years ago that a more formal program was established that is similar to what we have today, the Collegiate Recovery Community.  MSU has the first on-campus recovery housing in the state of Michigan. It all stemmed from needs being identified then students advocating for them and working with staff and faculty on-campus to make things happen. The ultimate mission of the Collegiate Recovery Community is to help students achieve their goals – their academic goals, their personal goals, and their recovery goals – and live a full college experience feeling supported in their recovery from a substance use disorder.”

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Louis Theroux’s Grounded podcast – Frankie Boyle: Alcoholism and the ‘horror’ of Early Life

Addiction Recovery Bulletin

The Horror –  

Dec. 29, 2020 – Boyle told Theroux he was drinking vodka as a child and “was definitely up for drinking on my own from my teens”.

When asked whether he was still functional and managing to hold down jobs, Boyle said: “Just. I was just getting to the stage where I wasn’t. I was in comedy when I stopped. To an extent you can do it drunk. You can certainly do 20 minutes drunk.” … He said: “I thought, ‘This isn’t good. This is getting to the stage where you either have to give up or die.’ So I gave up. I found it relative easy compared to other people. I didn’t fall off the wagon and go back on a lot or whatever.”

The comedian added that people would message him on social media to ask advice about giving up alcohol, but that those DMs had “dried up” considerably during lockdown.

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Elton John Discusses ZOOM AA Meetings with The Royals

Addiction Recovery Bulletin

WATCH – Yes, he gets pinned –  

Dec. 30, 2020 – “I connect with friends who I’ve known for over 30 years in the programme, and that’s great.” Meghan and Harry – who resigned from the British Royal Family in January this year – launched their new podcast with a holiday special, looking back at 2020 and the importance of keeping connected during the pandemic.They signed off by getting 19-month-old son Archie to help them wish listeners a “Happy New Year”.

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Colombia Considers Cocaine Legalization

Addiction Recovery Bulletin

No easy answers – 

December 30, 2020 – Aerial eradication, or the large-scale spraying of herbicide on crops from a plane, has been discontinued in Colombia in recent years. Ruiz’s predecessor began phasing out the aerial spraying of glyphosate in 2015, after the World Health Organization deemed the Monsanto-manufactured herbicide “probably carcinogenic.”

Such campaigns have long been a fixture of the United States’ global drug war—including, for example, US support of fumigating Mexican cannabis crops with poisonous herbicide in the 1970s. Spraying efforts in Colombia began in 1998 under the country’s Plan Colombia and the US Andean Counterdrug Initiative.

Efforts to destroy the cocaine supply continued in the absence of aerial eradication, with the US again playing a significant role. In 2018, former President Juan Manuel Santos approved the use of fumigating drones just one day after the White House released data showing crop cultivation was at an all-time high. Then, with the inauguration of far-right President Duque later that year, Colombia launched a US-funded militarized manual eradication effort that led to violent confrontations, including the killings of Indigenous land defenders. President Donald Trump has publicly scolded Duque for not doing enough, and ordered him in March 2020 to restart aerial fumigation.

The tactic is now expected to return in early 2021. According to the Justice Minister Wilson Ruiz’s early-December announcement, it will likely start in “a month or two,” once approved by an environmental authority and drug policy council. Farmers have describedglyphosate’s immediate adverse health consequences, such as “a fever and skin rashes on their arms.” The sprayed herbicide has also killed wide swathes of Indigenous and Afro-Colombian farmers’ legal crops, provoked deforestation and contaminated water, among other harms.

Another Approach

Meanwhile, Colombia Senator Iván Marulanda has authored a bill that would legalize the very crops that the country’s president—and the US—wants to destroy. His plan: Buy the entirety of each year’s coca harvest from growers, effectively bringing them into a legal market.

This approach could mitigate the ongoing displacement of farmers and destruction of land. Among other things, the government would then go on to sell raw coca leaves to largely Indigenous artisanal businesses, which would produce a supply that people could access through pharmacies. Marulanda has even suggested that Colombia could become the global supplier for regulated cocaine, with its own safe supply programs like those being explored in Canada.

“I don’t rule out the possibility that other countries want to implement a public health policy that would supply cocaine from the state to their consumers,” Marulanda told Vice. “They would buy from the Colombian state and distribute. And it would be distributed outside of the black market.”

The safe supply would complement Colombia’s constitutional ban on imprisoning people for using drugs and its protection of cocaine (and cannabis) possession for personal consumption, per a 1994 court ruling.

“I hope that candidates get asked, ‘What do you think about legalization?’ that’s never happened before in Colombia.”

But established law like that precedent doesn’t mean politicians will be compliant. In the first months of his tenure, Duque signed a decree permitting police searches for, and seizures of, any drugs on an individual—seemingly a violation of their legal rights. It did not authorize arrests, according to the AP, although people caught in posession would be fined.

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What a Year of Staring at Our Own Faces on Zoom Has Done To Us

Addiction Recovery Bulletin

Zoom Zoom on my desk, who’s the fairest? –  

December 30, 2020 – This year, we’ve spent an unholy amount of time staring at our own reflections on Zoom calls, Microsoft Teams, Google Hangouts and FaceTime. We should be listening to our friends, family or colleagues on these calls, but instead, we’ve become mesmerised by our own faces. If you can’t relate, you’re either an angel or you’re in denial.  “People are inherently interested in themselves and can’t help but look,” says psychotherapist Dr Aaron Balick.

“Until recently, who had the opportunity to see their own reflections back to themselves while reacting live to what’s happening around them? This interest in one’s own face is universal, but it’s also distracting, and if you’re focusing on yourself, you are not giving people your undivided attention, which can be a problem.” This high level of exposure to our own physicality is not a natural behaviour or experience, adds Counselling Directory member Dee Johnson. 

“Normally we can spend so much time avoiding, deleting or editing a single photograph that we feel uncomfortable and self-critical over, yet here we are in a spotlight, observing in real time, with no ability to alter and edit ourselves,” she says. “It’s a bit like watching something that we know feels awful, but we just cannot stop staring.” 

When someone else is talking, you may be drawn to your own reflection as a “subconscious checking response”, adds Johnson – by which we’re checking to make sure we’re presenting and responding well. Conversely, we’re also accustomed to focusing on the person who is speaking in any social situation, so when it’s our turn to talk on a video call, we may also be drawn to looking at – yes, you’ve guessed it – our own reflection.  The result, is that many of us have been staring at our own faces for most of our calls, most of the year. And month after month of this behaviour has the potential to alter our sense of self – something that’s been shifting in recent years anyway due to social media. 

“We are now very used to seeing images of ourselves either via selfies or photos on other people’s feeds. The self referential nature of everyday life is growing all the time,” says Dr Balick. “I think that now more than ever we are aware of how we appear to others and are conscious of that most of the time.”  “Body image issues are never about vanity, we are our harshest critics,” says Johnson. “It’s like having an internal bully, picking ourselves apart, comparing us to others, feeling resentful, believing that we are not good enough.”  Staring at our own reflections has impacted our relationship with ourselves, but it also has the potential to impact our relationships with others. 

“While I don’t think it’s a major source of miscommunication or relationship breakdown, it is one of the many variables that make dialogue today rich with a variety of distractions that diminish interpersonal complexity, which is so important for our psychological and emotional wellbeing,” says Dr Balick. 

An obvious solution to all of this may be to simply hide your own image on video calls (an option on most programmes and apps). But Johnson suggests it might be more helpful longterm to “challenge this avoidance”, learn about yourself and tackle your inner critic like a bully. 

“Try and ignore it, as like a bully it’s coming from a distorted insecure place,” she says. “It has no depth, it feels painful, so don’t give it energy.”

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Hundreds of Crimes to Support Family Meth Addiction

Addiction Recovery Bulletin

WATCH – Crimes of Despair – 

Dec. 28, 2020 – The defendants are accused of committing identity theft from more than 240 victims – mainly through mail theft – and of stealing more than $550,000 in vehicles. They are also accused of stealing and selling weapons, bicycles, sports memorabilia, jewelry, electronics, money and other items, between April 2019 and October 2020. The 12 defendants are variously charged with violating Colorado’s Organized Crime Control Act, identity theft, second degree kidnapping, burglary, robbery, aggravated motor vehicle theft, extortion, theft, menacing, assault and other charges. Eight of the 12 defendants were on probation, some in multiple cases, during the time of the alleged offenses.

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Behind the Historic Numbers of Drug Deaths Under COVID-19

Addiction Recovery Bulletin

Stay close to those you love – 

Dec. 28, 2020 – Earlier during the COVID-19 pandemic, stay-at-home orders were put into place to prevent unnecessary illness, death and collapse of the U.S. health care system. With a recent third surge of infections breaking daily records for new hospitalizations and deaths linked to the virus, several states have kept a patchwork of those public health precautions in place as the U.S. has failed to contain COVID-19.  But in doing so, transportation to clinics became complicated. Many people feared going to a doctor’s office could spread the virus further. In-person talk therapy sessions were abandoned for video conferencing. Some experts have said those options, while better than nothing, are not as effective for people who recently decided to enter recovery … Kennedy, who has said he is under consideration to lead the Office of National Drug Control Policy for the Biden administration, noted that the vaccination campaigns rolling out across the country could provide an opportunity to check on people struggling with mental health and substance use. Something as simple as a basic series of screening questions when giving the vaccine could help health care providers “identify and focus on those who are in jeopardy,” he said.

“If you’re already predisposed to addiction, this COVID crisis is going to make you even more vulnerable,” Kennedy said.

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Coping With COVID

Addiction Recovery Bulletin

Carefully –  

Dec. 28, 2020 – With the pandemic monopolizing government time, energy and resources, treatment programs with limited support are left to feel around in the dark. “We need more real-time data like they do for COVID patients,” says Sherry Daley, communications director for CCAPP. “We don’t know how many people need help with addiction and died from addiction. There just isn’t a plan right now to expand services or see where the need for services is growing or not growing … why isn’t the same level of attention focused on these deaths that we know are coming?”

The challenge for treatment programs can be broken down into four parts: lack of workforce, limited capacity, timing conflicts and insurance issues. In California, many workers at these programs are not licensed. This means they’re considered paraprofessionals. The lowest paid among them collect food stamps, and amid the pandemic, they’ve been required to go to work even though they’re struggling to pay for child care, Daley says.

For a short time, the state government allowed them to get free child care, but that option expired June 30. In August, the state’s Department of Health Care Services announced that programs can increase pay for staff as long as total costs don’t exceed 150 percent of usual costs, Daley says. This adjustment (which will last until the governor or both houses of the Legislature must declare the pandemic has ended), might help offset child care costs and encourage workers to stay in their positions, according to Daley.

Another issue is capacity. Half of California’s treatment systems have six-bed facilities, she says. In larger programs, owners can isolate a person with COVID-19, but six-bed facilities have no spare rooms, which makes owners reluctant to admit new clients with unknown infection status. Many close to new admissions when even one client tests positive, Daley says. There are two ways CCAPP hopes to address this.

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Anthony Hopkins Celebrates 45 Years with Video

Addiction Recovery Bulletin

VIDEO – The Knight of Sobriety – 

Dec. 29, 2020 – Noting that 2020 has been a tough year “full of grief and sadness,” “The Two Popes” star revealed that 45 years ago he received a “wake up call.”

“I was headed for a disaster,” he explained. “I was drinking myself to death. I’m not preachy but I got a message, a little though that said, ‘Do you want to live or die?’ And I said, ‘I want to live’ and suddenly the relief came.”

The Welsh-born thespian urged his followers to “hang in there.”

“You young people, don’t give up, just keep in there, just keep fighting. Be bold and mighty forces will come to your aid.”

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