Training Center
– The
Hopeful Way Foundation will be examining the feasibility of establishing a “Recovery Center” on
the almost half acre plot where the Bill Moore Oxford House is located near Accra. The exact nature of such a center is yet to
be determined but it would assist in strengthening the recovery movement that
is gaining momentum in Ghana. During the coming months, we will be examining various possibilities. Initial thoughts are to construct additional buildings which would accommodate 30 or so residents, a hall which could hold about 75 participants, break out rooms for smaller meetings and a kitchen. The current building being used as an Oxford House holds up to 14 residents. The Recovery Center, if that is to be its name, would be flexible and able to meet the training needs of the recovery in Ghana. The trainers would come from professionals in Ghana, the U.S. and other countries, recovery experts and others who have solid recovery experiences in 12-step recovery, Therapeutic Community, etc. It is likely that the Hopeful Way Foundation would move forward with this Center only if other organizations came on board with their formal collaboration.
Friday, November 8, 2013
Wednesday, October 30, 2013
Jerry Moe may come to Ghana
Jerry Moe, the National
Director of Children’s Programs for the Betty Ford Center, was introduced to Recovery Africa/Hopeful Way by Dr. Al Mooney. Jerry is a
noted and respected professional in the field of addiction, and has been
running the Children’s Program for The Betty Ford Center for over 14 years. Jerry is internationally known as an author,
lecturer, and trainer on issues for young children from addicted families. Mr. Moe is interested in coming to Africa; we
would like him to come to Ghana in 2014 to study how we might get children of
alcoholics and their families involved in recovery from addiction.
Dr. Whiters & Darcia Johnson going to Ghana
David Whiters, PhD and
Ms. Darcia Johnson, MS, both of whom are people in long-term recovery (29
and 9 years respectively), have expressed an interest in coming to Ghana for a
few months. Due to their very tight schedule, they are hoping that their
work in Ghana could begin before the end of the year, 2013. They attribute
their recovery to being involved in their 12-step recovery programs,
involvement in their church, and their faith in God. David is certified as an addiction
professional and is the founder and former Executive Director of Recovery
Consultants of Atlanta, Inc., a faith-based, peer-led Recovery Community
Organization. He has vast experiences with the recovery advocacy movement
and transitional housing programs. Both Dr. Whiters and Ms. Johnson have
met with Edwin Ahadzie in Atlanta to discuss how they might assist with the
House of St. Francis, at the Oxford House, including the proposed recovery
house for women, and with Ghana’s recovery advocacy efforts. They could
also assist us with organizing a faith-based recovery conference in Ghana.
Hopeful Way Foundation in 2013 (Report to Recoery Africa; Oct. 23, 2013)
In
general
2013 has been a good year for Hopeful Way Foundation and its assistance towards
recovery efforts in Ghana. It
illustrates that “addiction is not contagious but recovery is.” A growing number of Ghanaians are living good
lives in recovery and are carrying the message to others. Our objective is not to take on long-term
responsibility for running recovery programs but rather to assist, for example,
by managing the House of St. Francis for three years and establishing an Oxford
House Chapter to take responsibility for overseeing Oxford Houses in
Ghana. We continue to experience excellent
collaboration with addiction professionals in Ghana, the U.S. and
elsewhere. The Government of Ghana
continues to acknowledge and support our recovery work. We work closely with the Catholic Archdiocese
of Accra, NGOs and other treatment and rehab facilities. The HWF conducted over ten training sessions
during the year which were often facilitated by Ghanaian and visiting
professionals. Over ten 12-step meetings
in the greater Accra area are supported by people in recovery in HWF backed
facilities.
Saturday, October 12, 2013
Head of the House of St. Francis is in the U.S.
Edwin came to the U.S. in May and has been having wonderful experiences here since that time. We will get him to write something for this blog. He is currently on a visit to the Center for the Study of Addiction and Recovery at Texas Tech University and spent about two months studying Recovery Dynamics with Larry Gaines at Serenity Park in Little Rock, Arkansas. He was then under the care of Dr. Al Mooney and Chris Budnick at the Healing Place of Wake County located in Raleigh, North Carolina. Edwin then made a presentation at the Oxford House Convention held in Washington, DC and went to Willingway Hospital and the Center for the Addiction Recovery at Georgia Southern University in Statesboro, Georgia. He spent time with Emily Eisenhart, Director of the Center for Addiction Recovery and discussed her possible next visit to Ghana in 2014. Edwin is interested in the new movie "The Anonymous People" which is "out to change the addiction conversation from problems to SOLUTIONS. An independent feature documentary about the over 23 million Americans living in long-term recovery from alcohol and other drug addictions.
Edwin says that Ghana has a lot to learn from the film which deals with "Deeply entrenched social stigma and mass participation in widely successful anonymous 12-step groups have kept recovery voices silent and faces hidden for decades. The vacuum created by this silence has been filled by sensational mass media depictions of addiction that continue to perpetuate a lurid public fascination with the dysfunctional side of what is a preventable and treatable health condition. Just like women with breast cancer, or people with HIV/AIDS, a grass roots social justice movement is emerging. Courageous addiction recovery advocates have come out of the shadows and are organizing to end discrimination and move toward recovery-based solutions. The moving story of The Anonymous People is told through the faces and voices of the citizens, leaders, volunteers, corporate executives, and public figures who are laying it all on the line to save the lives of others just like them."
Edwin will try to take a copy of the film to Ghana.
Edwin says that Ghana has a lot to learn from the film which deals with "Deeply entrenched social stigma and mass participation in widely successful anonymous 12-step groups have kept recovery voices silent and faces hidden for decades. The vacuum created by this silence has been filled by sensational mass media depictions of addiction that continue to perpetuate a lurid public fascination with the dysfunctional side of what is a preventable and treatable health condition. Just like women with breast cancer, or people with HIV/AIDS, a grass roots social justice movement is emerging. Courageous addiction recovery advocates have come out of the shadows and are organizing to end discrimination and move toward recovery-based solutions. The moving story of The Anonymous People is told through the faces and voices of the citizens, leaders, volunteers, corporate executives, and public figures who are laying it all on the line to save the lives of others just like them."
Edwin will try to take a copy of the film to Ghana.
Sunday, September 22, 2013
Sponsor Manuals by John Elford
The Hopeful Way Foundation is experimenting with manuals produced
by John Elford. John wrote for the HWF
Blog saying:
The Sponsor Manuals are an approach to teaching the 12 Steps
that have been developed to include different models of education and
motivation. The main aim of the model was to develop an inexpensive tool that
can help facilitate peer lead recovery that is direct and follows a progressive
learning curve. This tool can be adapted for groups or individuals and forms a
written record of their progress through the Steps.
The books can be greatly enhanced by using motivational
interviewing, counselling and CBT techniques. If you have a team of motivated people they
can bring the teaching methods alive and create a really dynamic learning
environment.
I have added a review posted on amazon.com that sums up the approach very nicely, I have no connection to this person.
getintorecovery.com
Tuesday, September 17, 2013
Ankaful Twelve-Step Rehab
An objective of the Hopeful Way
Foundation is to assist hospitals and recovery institutions in Ghana build the capacity
of their members of staff. One such facility is the
Ankaful Twelve-Step Rehab where the late Bill Moore, Larry Gaines, Dr. Al
Mooney, Byron Merriweather and others have shared their many years of professional
experiences. Staff of the hospitals have
also participated in training programs at the House of St. Francis which have been led by treatment experts. Mrs. Rejoice Danso heads up the 12-Step Rehab
and writes about it below:
“The 12-step
drug/alcohol rehabilitation program of the Ankaful Psychiatric Hospital, Cape
Coast was started by Dr. Kojo Sagoe, Clinical Psychologist, PhD and the head of
the counseling unit of the hospital.
Assistance was provided by Miss Diana Ahiabor and Mrs. Rejoice Danso (Registered
Mental Nurses).
The program which was started as an outpatient
based department in 2009, and gradually moved into an in-house program in 2010. Clients are housed and fed while they undergo treatment programs which last from
three months to one year.
For the past three years, over 100 clients
(addicts and alcoholics) have been helped with a success rate of 60%. And for the past one year, free workshops
organized by the Hopeful Way Foundation have improved the knowledge of
the staff in the treatment of addiction.”
Rejoice Danso
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
