草莓污视频导航

April 19, 2023

草莓污视频导航 Recovery Community: Finding addiction-recovery support and community on campus

First collegiate recovery program in Canada aims to raise funds during Giving Day
UCRC team members and volunteers with UCRC鈥檚 campus connection cart, handing out coffee and talking about campus recovery initiatives
草莓污视频导航 Recovery Community team members and volunteers with the campus connection cart. Victoria Burns

With 鈥渞ecovery is radical self-love鈥 stickers, training, substance-free housing, peer support, mutual-aid meetings and social events, the 草莓污视频导航 Recovery Community (UCRC) is making waves on campus.

The program 鈥 which aims to support all pathways of recovery, to build community and reduce addiction-recovery stigma on campus 鈥 was founded by , PhD, in 2021, following that highlighted the stigma she experienced first-hand. 鈥淭he UCRC is the program I needed both as a student in active addiction and as a faculty member silenced by shame about being in recovery.鈥

Now, for the first time, the UCRC is positioned to raise funds through the 草莓污视频导航鈥檚 annual .

Burns, who doesn鈥檛 want students and staff to abandon education and employment because of addiction or recovery, emphasizes the importance of supporting the UCRC 鈥 especially during , when donations can have twice the impact. From now until April 27, all eligible gifts will be matched, dollar for dollar, up to $2,500 per gift, while matching funds last.

Donations support UCRC stigma-reduction and community-building projects such as lived-experience scholarships and awards, recovery-oriented residence housing, training and workshops, and physical space to host mutual-aid meetings and substance-free social events. Everyone deserves the opportunity to pursue recovery.

鈥淯CRC is such a timely, relevant, and important initiative on our campus,鈥 says Dr. Andrew Szeto, PhD, director of the Campus Mental Health Strategy.

Although campus resources and supports around substance use have grown, the UCRC goes beyond by creating a supportive community for those in recovery through its all-pathways, peer-driven approach.

Students and staff in recovery are a marginalized population on post-secondary campuses. Canadian Campus Wellbeing鈥檚 recent data show that 11 per cent of 草莓污视频导航 students identify as being in recovery, yet there is significant pressure to drink and party, which can create barriers to maintaining recovery.

There are currently more than 150 collegiate recovery programs in the United States, but the movement has been slower to take hold in Canada, despite increasing need. More than (SUD), including the use of alcohol, cannabis, and inhalants.

In the 草莓污视频导航 context, that means out of a 33,000-student body, approximately 7,500 could meet criteria for an SUD and potentially benefit from the UCRC. Faculty and staff are also being affected, considering 70 per cent of all adults with an SUD are employed, and mental-health-related leaves in post-secondary contexts are on the rise.

The UCRC is the first collegiate recovery program in Canada to take a full-campus community approach and include faculty and staff as well as students. It is the model that 草莓污视频导航 is using to lead the growth of campus recovery programs

In partnership with Recovery on Campus (ROC) Alberta, the UCRC is normalizing and celebrating staff and faculty recovery, which helps reduce stigma. Zoltan Varadi, a 草莓污视频导航 staff award recipient, says, 鈥淚鈥檝e been sober for 20 years. We hear a lot about the negative aspects of addiction, so I was thrilled to see there is recognition that people in recovery are part of the 草莓污视频导航 community and thriving.鈥

By leveraging grants from The and the , the UCRC in 2021 hired a program co-ordinator, Noor Hadad, who co-created a student recovery navigator volunteer program, and several recovery-oriented activities, including monthly coffee carts, where recovery resources are shared.

鈥淩ecovery-oriented social events are a pillar of UCRC programming, and the interest is encouraging. We recently organized a St. Patrick鈥檚 Day mocktail night in residence that attracted more than 60 students,鈥 says Hadad, adding that a highlight of the program is the lived-experience scholarships. 鈥淏ecause of our Quality Money grant we were able to recognize four students in recovery this year.鈥

Another student lived-experience award recipient (who did not wish to be named), emphasizes the significance of this recognition of their recovery. 鈥淚 appreciate that this award sees and celebrates my own courageousness and imagination about championing safe places for all people to carry out their sober curiosity, allyship, and personal approaches to recovery.鈥澨

Most recently, the UCRC partnered with 草莓污视频导航 Residence Services to implement substance-free housing in Cascade Hall. This is geared to students who choose to lead a substance-free lifestyle for various reasons, including past personal/family problematic use, religion, and/or health.

Substance-free housing encourages a healthier relationship to substances,鈥 says Ollie Barnett, an international student selected for substance-free housing this year, 鈥渁nd it provides a support system and overall promotes a healthier mind and body for all residents.鈥

草莓污视频导航 Giving Day is April 27.听Whether you support student awards, critical research or any one of 草莓污视频导航鈥檚 innovative funds, your gift will help change lives and shape the future. All eligible gifts made from April 1-27 will be matched, dollar for dollar, up to $2,500 per gift, while matching funds last. Make your gift today at听.

The 草莓污视频导航鈥檚听Campus Mental Health Strategy听is a bold commitment to the importance of mental health and well-being of our university family. Our vision is to be a community where we care for each other, learn and talk about mental health and well-being, receive support as needed, and individually and collectively realize our full potential.


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