Category Archives: Addiction Recovery Posts

posts about addiction and the recovery process

What kind of training do I need to be a recovery coach?

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Melissa Killeen

I published my book Recovery Coaching – A Guide to Coaching People in Recovery from Addictions in 2013. Since then, recovery coach or peer recovery specialist training has become one of the fastest growing aspects of the coaching field. So what kind of training do I need to be a recovery coach?

In 2013, the organizations that offer recovery coach or peer recovery-specialist training numbered around 50. Today, the number has grown to 250. Many state certification boards have established recovery coach and peer recovery support specialist certifications.

Many of the organizations that offer addictions recovery coach training or peer recovery-support specialist training are listed on my web site: https://www.mkrecoverycoaching.com/recovery-coach-training-organizations/. For many people interested in being a recovery coach, the training costs, deciding on the best training organization and the training necessary to fulfill the certification requirements can be confusing. So I would like to attempt to clear up this confusion and will answer these questions in this post:

  • What are the guidelines I must meet to apply for recovery coaching training?
  • What kind of training do I need to be a recovery coach?

What are the guidelines to apply for recovery coaching training?

Applicants must meet the following guidelines to apply for a training course in order to be a recovery coach or a peer recovery support-specialist. These guidelines are shared by many training organizations and certification boards across the nation as a standard for what a potential recovery coach must have before applying for recovery coaching training:

  • High school diploma, GED or higher
  • Minimum of one year of direct knowledge of sponsorship and 12-step programs
  • Minimum one year of sobriety from substance use or one year sobriety in co-occurring mental health and substance use disorders (self-attestation)

What kind of training should I look for?

Certification boards require the coach to receive outside training that fulfills the requirements mandated by the state board. These requirements are often a certain amount of hours training in topics such as addiction recovery theory and models, coaching ethics, motivational interviewing, relapse prevention, nicotine cessation, suicide prevention and HIV-AIDS education. Each state and organization has different requirements. So first check with your state to ensure the course you take will be accepted by the state credentialing board.

There are trainings offered that can give a coach more information that may not be on the state certification board list, but are very helpful. The kinds of training I found helpful as a new recovery coach were: conflict management, anger management, intervention training, co-occurring disorders, behavioral addictions, the pharmacology of addiction, and psycho-pharmacology as well as knowledge about coaching families in relationships with addicted persons. There are also training organizations that offer three different levels of recovery coaching training: novice-, intermediate- and master-level coaching certificates.

The places in which you receive this training are quite diverse. In the links section of this web site, I list over 250 organizations offering recovery coach training. The courses can be online, or in a classroom. The costs for this training is diverse as well, from free (in Ohio) up to $4,000 per course. The length of the course could be three days or four months.

At no time does taking a recovery coaching course give you an immediate state certification board recovery-coaching credential. It gives you a document (called a certificate) that says you completed the training. There are many coaches who do not seek state board certification, and use this document or certificate from a training organization as adequate proof they are knowledgeable in performing the duties of a recovery coach.

There is one international credentialing organization, the International Certification and Reciprocity Consortium, commonly known as the IC & RC (http://internationalcredentialing.org/) that runs many state credentialing boards and has developed an exam for a Peer Recovery (PR) Certification. The IC & RC suggests applicants check with their state credentialing board for specific test taking guidelines.

Are there any additional requirements for recovery coaching certification?

NAADAC, the Association for Addiction Professionals, and the National Certification Commission for Addiction Professionals (NCC AP) http://www.naadac.org/NCPRSS offer the Peer Recovery Support-Specialist Certification. Similar to the requirements of the IC & RC, the NCC AP recommends, in order to receive certification, a coach read and sign a statement on the application affirming adherence to the Peer Recovery Support-Specialist Code of Ethics. Credentialing boards require supervisors of the coaches-in-training to sign a document verifying they have supervised the coach during the period of the coach’s training. Letters of recommendation are also items required by some credentialing boards. Other state boards require a recent photograph. As always, check with the state credentialing board for specific requirements for credentialing.

Next week’s post will review what certification is required to be a peer-to-peer support-specialist working with people in mental health recovery

 

 

 

 

 

 

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What kind of certification do I need to be a recovery coach?

melissa-new-post

Melissa Killeen

I published my book Recovery Coaching – A Guide to Coaching People in Recovery from Addictions in 2013. Since then, recovery coach or peer-recovery specialist certification training has become one of the fastest growing aspects of the coaching field. So what kind of certification do I need to be a recovery coach?

In 2013, the organizations that offer recovery coach or peer-recovery specialist training numbered around 50. Today, the number has grown to 250. Many state certification boards have established recovery coach and peer-recovery support specialist certifications. Yet, for many people that seek to be a recovery coach the qualifications, the training, the requirements for certification, or credentialing seem baffling. So I would like to attempt to clear up this confusion and will answer these questions in this post:

  • What is the process for certification as a recovery coach or peer recovery specialist?
  • What kind of certification should I be focusing on?

What is the process of being qualified, getting training and then credentialed as a recovery coach or peer-recovery support specialist?

If you are investigating becoming a recovery coach, I suggest you follow these steps:

  1. Research the training organizations that offer recovery coach training you can afford. Go to https://www.mkrecoverycoaching.com/recovery-coach-training-organizations/ for a list of addiction recovery coach training organizations
  2. Verify that you meet the qualifications to apply for the course (e.g. be 18-years-old, have a GED or high school diploma, one year sobriety from any addiction)
  3. Take and pass the course, retain the coaching certificate for future purposes
  4. Research places like Recovery Community Organizations or treatment centers to work or volunteer as a recovery-coach-in-training
  5. Apply to your state certification board for recovery coach certification (a fee may apply)
  6. Complete the recovery-coach-in-training supervised practice hours that are required by the state board
  7. Send in your application with paperwork verifying the completion of practice hours to the state credentialing board with a certification fee (fee varies for every state, from $100-$250)
  8. Receive your recovery coaching or peer-recovery support specialist certificate
  9. In the next 2 – 5 years take the required courses for renewing this certificate. Refer to your state board for more information on courses and renewal time frames. A renewal fee will be required.

What kind of certification do I need to be a recovery coach?

For an addiction recovery coach, the certification and training is prefaced with the terms: peer-support specialist, certified peer-recovery practitioner, recovery coach or peer-recovery specialist. Every state is different and every state uses different names for these certifications. Look for courses that offer the training needed for an addictions coach and a peer working with people in mental health recovery certification. It is the exact same training, in the same exact classroom, for two different jobs descriptions! It may be confusing now, and quite possibly the content and descriptions of  these courses may change going forward. But I would have to have a crystal ball to predict that for certain.

I suggest you first take a certification training course. You can make the decision after the training is completed to apply for state board certification. As a coach if you are interested in being your own business person, certification by a training organization should be adequate. If you want to work in a treatment center, with a recovery community organization, social services agency or hospital, certification issued by the state’s certification board or the International Certification and Reciprocity Consortium (IC&RC) is required by the institution hiring you. If you want to carry professional liability insurance, or be reimbursed by Medicaid for your services, certification by a state certification board is mandatory.

What is a state certification board?

The process for receiving a certificate as a recovery coach is overseen by a state’s certification or licensing board. A state certification board tests and renews practitioner’s (coaches, therapists, nurses, etc.) certificates to ensure their knowledge is up to par. Also, that they have the ethical knowledge to practice in their profession. These processes for certification, such as training, educational requirements, exams and renewal guidelines, varies from state to state. These certification standards are recognized by health care companies, insurance companies, Medicaid, Medicare as well as companies that hire these practitioners.

These state certification boards are the same boards that issue licenses or certifications for drug and alcohol counselors, and therapists. Some states have combined licenses and certifications boards all in one office, so it could be the same office in which nurses or hairdressers receive their licenses. I suggest you search the Internet for drug and alcohol certification for your state. Then search for the state board website for recovery coach or peer-recovery support specialist certification. As of May 2008, thirty state credentialing boards had developed criteria for the training and deployment of recovery coaches and peer-recovery specialists, so you should have no trouble finding these boards on the Internet.

What is Reciprocity?

Reciprocity is a term you will see used often on these board sites. When you are certified through your home state’s certification board, you may have the ability to transfer that credential to another state. This is called reciprocity. State certification boards may offer reciprocity to certified coaches in other states. The state boards have the authority to set reciprocity requirements for coaches to practice in their state. Not all certifications are eligible for reciprocity. It is vitally important that you investigate reciprocity guidelines prior to relocating to another state, because it can be a very complicated process.

There are national and international recovery coach certifications available. In 2013, the International Certification and Reciprocity Consortium (IC&RC) developed a peer recovery credential. The application for the peer-recovery certification appears on the IC & RC web site. An IC & RC credential is accepted by many agencies and treatment centers when they are hiring recovery coaches.

In next week’s post I will review what kind of training you need to have in order to apply for recovery coach certification.

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Substantial R.O.I. from Funding Recovery Programs

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Melissa Killeen

“Most crucially, everyone must be aware of how logical and smart treatment is from a purely financial standpoint.” – Dr Richard Juman, president of the New York State Psychological Association

Can there be a substantial R.O.I. (return on investment) from government-funded recovery programs? How can funding recovery programs provide high returns on the funding investment when a new report from the CDC says opioid use is at epidemic proportions? When heroin deaths nearly quadrupled from 2000 to 2013? And the trend is worsening: heroin-related
deaths, grew a staggering 39.3% from 2012 to 2013. There were about 44,000 drug drug-addiction-9847058overdose deaths in the U.S. in 2013, more than 16,000 of them involving powerful prescription painkillers such as Vicodin and OxyContin. [i] Each day, 44 people in the United States die from overdose of prescription painkillers.[ii] How much funding can the government forecast to pump into this epidemic? Addressing the impact of substance use alone is estimated to cost hundreds of billions each year. Is there enough government money to make a dent? We have to, at least, try.

Substance abuse is costly to our nation, exacting over $600 billion annually in costs related to healthcare, lost work, lower productivity and crime. Research from the Massachusetts Opioid Task Force and Department of Public Health established that mental and substance use disorders are among the top conditions that result in significant costs to families, employers, and publicly funded health systems. In 2012, an estimated 23.1 million Americans aged 12 and older needed treatment for substance use. By 2020, mental and substance-use disorders will surpass all physical diseases as a major cause of disability worldwide. [iii]

In June 2006, the Washington State Institute for Public Policy, whose mission is to carry out practical, non-partisan research on issues of importance to Washington State, was directed by the Washington Legislature to estimate whether treatment for people with alcohol, drug, and mental health disorders offers economic advantages, or a R.O.I. (return on investment). By reviewing “what works,” literature, and estimating monetary value of benefits, they reached these conclusions:

  1. The average substance use treatment program can achieve roughly a 15 to 22 percent reduction in the incidence or severity of these disorders.
  2. Treatment of these disorders can achieve about $3.77 in benefits per dollar of treatment costs. This is equivalent to a 56 percent rate of return on investment.
  3. Estimated that a reasonably aggressive implementation policy could generate $1.5 billion in net benefits for people in Washington with $416 million in net taxpayer benefits, and the risk of losing money is small.[iv]

But still, state and federal legislators are hesitant to fund intervention, treatment, and recovery programs.

“Together we must challenge individuals, communities, cities, counties, regions, states, and the nation to be accountable for the outcomes of the justice systems at every level of government.”
— James Bell

Approximately one-quarter of those people held in U.S. prisons or jails have been convicted of a drug offense.[v] The United States incarcerates more people for drug offenses than any other country. With an estimated 6.8 million Americans struggling with drug abuse or dependence, the growth of the prison population continues to be driven largely by incarceration for drug offenses.[vi] Where does this spiral of incarceration instead of treatment stop?

For example, the average cost for a year of an offender treatment program is $5,000, whereas a year of imprisonment costs over $31,000, and far more in areas like New York City where the average annual cost per inmate was $167,731 in 2012. Court ordered addiction treatment programs can seriously reduce prison costs.[vii]

The Pennsylvania Commission on Crime and Delinquency (PCCD) examined the return-on-investment for seven programs (e.g. Big Brothers and Big Sisters, Strengthening Families, and Multisystemic Therapy programs) that are supported by the state’s Commission and Department of Public Welfare. It was concluded that these programs represent a potential $317 million return to the Commonwealth in terms of reduced correctional costs, lessened welfare and social services burden, and increased employment and tax revenue. The researchers estimated that the programs produced returns of $1 to $25, for every dollar invested, and could generate cost savings as great as $130 million for a single program.[viii] Are these facts overlooked by legislators in state and federal government?

Maryland voters believe by a five-to-one margin that the drug problem is getting worse. The same poll showed that voters believe by a two-to-one margin that there are too many people in prison, and 86% of respondents favor judges having the option to order drug treatment rather than prison for some offenders. [ix] Have the voters spoken?

“Recovery with justice allows us to bury the ghosts of the past and to live with ourselves in the present.” William White

So in this election year, I urge you to contact your local state representatives, contact your state senators and congressmen/women and urge them to increase funding for substance-addiction treatment and implement reforms that will send addicts to treatment programs like Drug Court or COPS, (Office of Community Oriented Policing Services) versus prison.

William White just posted an excellent letter to our presidential candidates that outlines the impact opioid addiction has on individuals, families, and communities. White requests a policy statement by the candidates in the 2016 Presidential campaign. Copy this letter and send it to the candidates you support: http://www.williamwhitepapers.com/blog/

And remember:

There are 23 million people in long-term recovery, and we vote.

 

References used in this blog

[i] The American Association for the Treatment of Opioid Dependence (AATOD) March 18, 2015 10:51 AM, Accessed on August 23, 2015 at: http://finance.yahoo.com/news/only-1-9-substance-abuse-145129124.html

[ii] Understanding the Epidemic, Center for Disease Control, access on August 23, at: http://www.cdc.gov/drugoverdose/epidemic/index.html

[iii] Massachusetts Opioid Task Force and Department of Public Health Recommendations on Priorities for Investments in Prevention, Intervention, Treatment and Recovery, http://www.mass.gov/eohhs/docs/dph/substance-abuse/opioid/report-of-the-opioid-task-force-6-10-14.pdf  Accessed August 23, 2015

[iv] Washington State Institute for Public Policy, accessed on August 23, 2015 at: http://www.wsipp.wa.gov/ReportFile/945/Wsipp_Evidence-based-Treatment-of-Alcohol-Drug-and-Mental-Health-Disorders-Potential-Benefits-Costs-and-Fiscal-Impacts-for-Washington-State_Full-Report.pdf

[v] Number of people in federal or state prison for drug offenses: Harrison, Paige, and Allen J. Beck. Prisoners in 2005. Washington, DC: Bureau of Justice Statistics. Estimate of jail inmates held on drug offense derived from James, Doris J. 2004. Profile of jail inmates, 2002. Washington, DC: Bureau of Justice Statistics.

[vi] U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, Office of Applied Studies. 2005 National Survey on Drug Use & Health: Detailed Tables. Table 5.1A Online at www.drugabusestatistics.samhsa.gov/NSDUH/2k5NSDUH/tabs/Sect5peTabs1to82.htm#Tab5.1A

[vii] The American Association for the Treatment of Opioid Dependence (AATOD)March 18, 2015 10:51 AM, Accessed on August 23, 2015 at: http://finance.yahoo.com/news/only-1-9-substance-abuse-145129124.html

[viii] EpisCenter, Penn State University, Cost-benefit Assessment of Pennsylvania’s Approach to Youth Crime Prevention Shows Dramatic Return on Investment access on August 23, 2015 at: http://www.episcenter.psu.edu/sites/default/files/Fact%20Sheet%20-%20Cost%20Benefit%20of%20PA%20Prevention.pdf

[ix] Justice Policy.org accessed on August 23, 2015 at: http://www.justicepolicy.org/uploads/justicepolicy/documents/04-01_rep_mdtreatmentorincarceration_ac-dp.pdf

[ix] Maryland Voter Survey. (December, 2003). Bethesda, Maryland: Potomac Incorporated.

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