terri tavenner, associate director, anishnaabek healing circle inter-tribal council of michigan atr...

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Terri Tavenner, Associate Director, Anishnaabek Healing Circle Inter-Tribal Council of Michigan ATR and Service Integration What Does It Mean? 1

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Terri Tavenner, Associate Director, Anishnaabek Healing CircleInter-Tribal Council of Michigan

ATR and Service Integration

What Does It Mean?

1

ATR III Goals

Goals of the Anishnaabek Healing Circle: Expand capacity, by bringing providers into the ATR Network Support client choice, by offering recovery support options Increase the array of clinical and recovery support services

Target Population

Eligible clients are enrolled members of the 12 collaborating tribes in Michigan and members of other federally recognized, state recognized, and Canadian tribes residing in the project service area.

Non-native family members and descendants are eligible as well.

All clients must have a current or past problem with alcohol or drug abuse.

The project serves clients age 12 and older: 8752 clients in 4 years.

3

ATR II Gender

4

47%

53%

ATR II Gender of Unduplicated Clients, n=5,288

MaleFemale

10 to 12 yrs

13 to 17 yrs

18 to 24 yrs

25 to 34 yrs

35 to 44 yrs

45 to 54 yrs

55 to 64 yrs

65 yrs+

0 200 400 600 800 1000 1200 1400

1

246

468

573

493

383

189

125

0

227

416

626

580

477

289

194

Unduplicated ATR II clients, Age group by gender, n=5,288

MaleFemale

The Anishnaabek Healing Circle is effective!

5

Abstinent

No Arrests

Employed/In School

HBS Consequences

Social Connect

Stable housing

0.00% 10.00% 20.00% 30.00% 40.00% 50.00% 60.00% 70.00% 80.00% 90.00% 100.00%

52.00%

92.00%

54.70%

83.90%

76.70%

77.00%

67.40%

96.50%

57.00%

90.60%

90.00%

79.30%

29.6%

4.9%

4.2%

8.0%

17.3%

3.0%

ATR II Intake, Follow-up, and Change on Key Indicators

ChangeAt 6 MonthsAt Intake

ATR II client outcomes (N=2984). Improvements in abstinence, no arrests, no HBSC and socially

connectedness were statistically significant (p<.001).

Readiness to Change and

Recovery Tasks

ATR Screening, Intake, GPRA

Phase I Pre-Treatment Readiness

Limited to motivational development and recovery

coaching

Phase II – Clinical Treatment Full array of clinical and

recovery support services

Phase III – Aftercare Full array of recovery

support services

Anishnaabek Healing Circle Phases

Tribal Recovery Oriented Systems of Care

Shifting the model of intervention from acute care of individuals to a sustained recovery management approach relies on partnerships with individuals, families and communities. ~White & Sanders (2004).

ATR II started the “process” of integrating services into a ROSC. ATR III continues that process by identifying key elements to integration.

Enhance and Expand

• The ITC philosophy is to build the capacity of collaborating tribes.

• 12 tribes and one urban Indian center are the ATR Access & Care Coordination Centers – the gateway into ATR services.

• Empowerment implies responsibility: every tribe builds on what resources already exist in their community to meet their own needs.

Care Coordination

• Care Coordination is the key to sustained recovery.

• A Care Coordinator who is connected to the community can help the consumer connect.

• The consumer and the Care Coordinator are partners who discover local recovery resources.

The Tribal Umbrella

• Every tribe has programs: every program and department is part of the circle of recovery for an individual.

• Whatever (and whoever) the individual needs to support their recovery is whatever (and whoever) should be integrated into the circle of recovery.

• Build on what already exists.

Seeing the Big Picture Key elements to integrating services

• Building relationships• Taking Time• Sharing stories and dreaming dreams• Including everybody• Forming a Learning Community• Building on community strengths and

resiliency

Recovery Coaching is a step towards integrating the community into the recovery circle

• Helping Healer-Concept developed through a previous grant to help bridge clinical therapy and cultural resources.

• Works closely with consumers.

• Can connect consumer to cultural & spiritual teachings through storytelling, talking circles, and hands on lessons with individuals.

New Developments for ATR III

Strategies for building our capacity to provide a full array of recovery support services include:

A Recovery Coach Curriculum and Certification process A Recovery Oriented System of Care within our tribal

communities Outreach to previously under-served populations: veterans

and military, chronic substance abusers, prisoner re-entry, elders and adolescents.

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Developing a Recovery-Oriented System of Care (ROSC)

Identify program qualities that will support a ROSC

Identify program qualities that will support Recovery Coaching

Develop a strategic plan to obtain “buy-in” from tribal behavioral health and health administrations to implement a ROSC in each of 12 tribes in Michigan

Implement the strategic plan to parallel the timeline for certification of the first cohort of Recovery Coaches

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Outcomes:

Certified Recovery Coaches within each tribal community, who are from each tribal community, who can provide ATR billable recovery management services to the target population.

A Recovery Oriented System of Care that includes programs, people and resources, with the consumer at the center of the circle.

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Winter Teaching Lodge Behavioral Health Cultural Service Expansion with ATR

The solutions already

exist. Choose Recovery

Access to Recovery Anishnaabek Healing Circle 2956 Ashmun, Suite A Sault Ste. Marie MI 49783 (906) 632-6896 www.atrhealingcircle.com

Staff Eva Petoskey, Director (231-357-4886) [email protected] Terri Tavenner, Associate Director [email protected] Donelda Harper, Training & Audit Specialist [email protected] Lori McDonald, GPRA & Media Specialist [email protected] Aagii Clement, Provider Liaison Specialist [email protected] Connie DePlonty, Voucher Coordinator [email protected] Cora Gravelle, Call In Center Client Access & Outreach [email protected] Sheila Hammock, Call In Center Client Access & Follow-up [email protected]

Produced by the Inter-Tribal Council of Michigan with Access to Recovery (ATR) Anishnaabek Healing Circle Grant (1 H79 TI023118) funds from the Center for Substance Abuse Treatment (CSAT), Substance Abuse and Mental HealthAdministration (SAMHSA), U.S. Department of Health & Human Services (HHS). Content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the agency. 28