1st Edition

Responding to Physical and Sexual Abuse in Women with Alcohol and Other Drug and Mental Disorders Program Building

By Bonita Veysey, Colleen Clark Copyright 2004
    216 Pages
    by Routledge

    216 Pages
    by Routledge

    Learn from the experiences of these program sites to develop better services for women with co-occurring disorders and histories of violence

    This book explores the efforts of the Women, Co-Occurring Disorders and Violence Study to address the significant lack of appropriate services for women trauma survivors with co-occurring mental health and substance use disorders. Experts describe the services integration programs of nine participating sites that address the multiple needs of these women. In this guide, you will find useful strategies for integrating services that are responsive to the strengths and needs of the individual as well as the community.

    This vital resource examines how—over a period of five years—sites designed, implemented, and evaluated their interventions. You will learn how sites developed their strategies for integrating services at both the clinical/individual level and at the services or systems level. The book also shows how trauma-informed, gender-specific, culturally competent care fosters treatment that is sensitive to related issues such as children and parenting, interpreting culture cues, and socioeconomic difficulties.

    In Responding to Physical and Sexual Abuse in Women with Alcohol and Other Drug and Mental Disorders, you will learn about the details of nine different programs, including:

    • Franklin County Women’s Research Project—a collaborative project for rural women, designed and operated by local consumer/survivor/recovering women (CSRs)
    • The Triad Women’s Project—a semi-rural comprehensive system of care to respond to the needs of women and children
    • The Women Embracing Life and Living (WELL) Project-interventions include trauma, parenting, systems integration and mutual help groups with
      Integrated Care Facilitators providing resource coordination and advocacy
      services
    • PROTOTYPES, Centers for Innovation in Health, Mental Health, and Social Services—the three levels of integration the Systems Change Center implemented
    • the Boston Health Commission—an integrated model of trauma-informed services culturally and linguistically appropriate for its service population of primarily poor Latina and African American women
    • Palladia’s Portal Project—a comprehensive trauma-informed intervention designed to put trauma and safety first to assist women remaining in treatment
    • Arapahoe House’s New Directions for Families—a family-oriented intervention for women and their dependent children
    • Allies—comprehensive, integrated services for women as well as intervention for their children, ages 5-10
    • The District of Columbia Trauma Collaboration Study (DCTCS)—a two-phase project addressing the needs of dually diagnosed women trauma survivors
    Responding to Physical and Sexual Abuse in Women with Alcohol and Other Drug and Mental Disorders provides you with first-hand accounts of the process by which programs and service systems were transformed. As challenges were met and strategy was adapted to “real world” situations, the sites discussed in this text found new and improved methods for helping this unique group of women. The book offers tips, solutions, and possibilities to mental health professionals, substance abuse professionals, and domestic violence professionals, and even patients and/or clients searching for support.

    • Introduction (Bonita M. Veysey and Colleen Clark)
    • Integration of Alcohol and Other Drug, Trauma and Mental Health Services: An Experiment in Rural Services Integration in Franklin County, MA (Bonita M. Veysey, Rene Andersen, Leslie Lewis, Mindy Mueller, and Vanja M. K. Stenius)
    • Creating Alcohol and Other Drug, Trauma, and Mental Health Services for Women in Rural Florida: The Triad Women’s Project (Colleen Clark, Julienne Giard, Margo Fleisher-Bond, Sharon Slavin, Marion Becker, and Arthur Cox)
    • The Women Embracing Life and Living (WELL) Project: Using the Relational Model to Develop Integrated Systems of Care for Women with Alcohol/Drug Use and Mental Health Disorders with Histories of Violence (Norma Finkelstein and Laurie S. Markoff)
    • A Model for Changing Alcohol and Other Drug, Mental Health, and Trauma Services Practice: PROTOTYPES Systems Change Center (Vivian B. Brown, Elke Rechberger. and Paula Bjelajac)
    • Boston Consortium of Services for Families in Recovery: A Trauma-Informed Intervention Model for Women’s Alcohol and Drug Addiction Treatment (Hortensia Amaro, Sarah McGraw, Mary Jo Larson, Luz Lopez, Rita Nieves, and Brenda Marshall)
    • The Portal Project: A Layered Approach to Integrating Trauma into Alcohol and Other Drug Treatment for Women (Sharon Cadiz, Andrea Savage, Diane Bonavota, James Hollywood, Erica Butters. Michelle Neary, and Laura Quiros)
    • New Directions for Families: A Family-Oriented Intervention for Women Affected by Alcoholism and Other Drug Abuse, Mental Illness and Trauma (Nancy R. VanDeMark, Ellen Brown, Angela Bornemann, and Susan Williams)
    • Allies: Integrating Women’s Alcohol, Drug, Mental Health and Trauma Treatment in a County System (Jennifer P. Heckman, Frances A. Hutchins, Jennifer C. Thom, and Lisa A. Russell)
    • Integrated Trauma Services Teams for Women Survivors with Alcohol and Other Drug Problems and Co-Occurring Mental Disorders (Roger D. Fallot and Maxine Harris)
    • Index
    • Reference Notes Included

    Biography

    Bonita Veysey, Colleen Clark