Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

VIRUS an addiction roadblock.

- ASHTON ELEY

HARRISON — Bradley Cambell didn’t finish his stay at Humbled Hearts’ Haven House, a sober living home for men, earlier this year. It wasn’t that he didn’t stay clean but because covid-19 caused the nonprofit to temporaril­y close.

Months went by, Cambell stepped out of his routine and used again after six and a half months sober, he said. But when the nonprofit opened again in October, he knew he needed to return and finish the work he’d started to stay sober.

“I was here again as soon as the houses were back open. God has me here for a reason,” Cambell said.

He doesn’t blame the pandemic, though it was the reason he was thrown off his schedule and from his daily in-person support network at Humbled Hearts.

“I lost sight of my priorities. I wasn’t staying in classes, in a regular routine…Idle hands for eight months,” he said. “I can’t blame nobody but myself. I couldn’t be more grateful to each and every person here in the program.”

Humbled Hearts is one of many sober living homes and recovery outreach groups in the state that had to shut down at some point this year, are still shuttered or open at limited capacity, said program Director Trisha Earnhart and officials at other programs.

Arkansas has 33 licensed residentia­l substance abuse centers. Five are Arkansas Community Correction programs. Nonprofits such as Humbled Hearts are not classified as Alcohol and Other Drug Abuse Treatment Programs and are not licensed by the state, so the state does not have an official tally.

Even before the pandemic, Earnhart said Arkansas’ need for substance abuse treatment programs was great; covid has only made it worse.

“Going into a sober living home after leaving an addiction treatment center can oftentimes make the difference between sobriety and relapse,” said Earnhart,

who graduated herself from recovery in 2016 before founding Humbled Hearts. “People are relapsing left and right not having that everyday support. We’ve lost people.”

Over 81,000 drug overdose deaths occurred in the United States in the 12 months ending in May 2020. That’s the highest number of overdose deaths ever recorded in a year-long period, according to recent provisiona­l data from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

While overdose deaths were already increasing, the latest numbers suggest an accelerati­on of overdoses during the pandemic, according to a Dec. 18 CDC news release.

“The disruption to daily life due to the COVID-19 pandemic has hit those with substance use disorder hard,” said CDC Director Robert Redfield. “As we continue the fight to end this pandemic, it’s important to not lose sight of different groups being affected in other ways. We need to take care of people suffering from unintended consequenc­es.”

BEFORE AND AFTER

Although the numbers continue to improve, Arkansas has one of the most severe opioid problems in the U.S., said Kevin O’Dwyer, Arkansas State Medical Board general counsel.

Arkansas has the second-highest opioid prescribin­g rate in the nation, according to Arkansas Take Back, an educationa­l program under the state Department of Human Services.

In 2018, 67,367 (20.7 per 100,000) people in the U.S. died from drug overdose, a 4.6% decrease from 2017 (21.7 per 100,000). Opioids — mainly synthetic opioids other than methadone — are currently the main drivers of drug overdose deaths, according to the CDC’s latest published data.

Arkansas had 444 drug overdose deaths — a rate of 15.7 per 100,000 — in 2018, placing it squarely in the middle in terms of states’ rates, according to CDC statistics.

Prescripti­ons for highly addictive opioids have decreased about 29% from 2017 to 2019 for Arkansans with Medicaid and private insurance coverage, according to a

2020 analysis by the Arkansas Center for Health Improvemen­t. The state also is seeing an increase in prescripti­ons for the anti-overdose drug naloxone for those who were prescribed high-dose opioids during that time, the analysis showed.

In addition to prescripti­on and naloxone numbers, many who work to address drug abuse in the state said treatment and peer-to-peer recovery programs play a big role.

Jimmy McGill, Arkansas Take Back peer recovery program manager, said the state is a national leader when it comes to recovery efforts and is continuing to build upon its resources, such as recently launching four new jail programs and hospital programs.

McGill said that covid-19 caused a spike in relapse rates in Arkansas, which has anywhere between 30,000 to 40,000 people in long-term substance abuse recovery. Many of the safety nets people rely on to help them stay sober – group meetings, gyms and churches, for example – shut down, he said.

“In the very first time in everyone’s recovery, the unthinkabl­e happened: Everything was taken away from us in a blink of an eye… All of a sudden, we’re seeing people with long- term clean time using. Somebody who’s been clean 20 years is drunk and catching DUIs. It’s insane,” said McGill, whose words were echoed by many others in the field.

Drug overdoses appear to be slightly down from 2019 ( 12.03 to 11.96 per 100,000 in 2020), according to Dec. 11 Health Department data. However, naloxone deployment­s rose from 192 in 2019 to 379 in 2020.

“We saw a triple rise in naloxone administra­tions.

What we saw that was very unique is that a lot of people who survived those overdoses ended up in the suicide numbers later on. We believe covid played a massive part in that,” McGill said. “Covid stopped a lot of stuff, but it didn’t stop addiction. The dope house is still jumping. Where everyone put safety protocols, addiction capitalize­d, mental health crisis capitalize­d. Recovery was forced to step up.”

The National Suicide Prevention Lifeline and the Disaster Distress Helpline both saw notable increases in call volume this year compared with 2019, according to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.

RECOVERY IN A PANDEMIC

In early spring, many treatment and outreach centers – if not shuttering entirely – began admitting only those who had just gone through medical detox or could prove they had been quarantini­ng properly.

Riley Gambill with Recovery Centers of Arkansas said he didn’t agree with the decision to limit admittance. Taking only people from detox excluded several affected population­s, including those addicted to opioids and meth with no other way to enter treatment. But it seemed like the only way to ensure clients didn’t have the virus before adequate testing was available.

“That was a big constraint when covid first started,” Gambill said. “Our staff definitely see people struggling. We’ve had tough cases recently.”

Recovery Centers of Arkansas is one of eight Arkansas Department of Human Services-funded contractor­s and serves five central area counties. It recently acquired a second sober living residence for a total of 36 men’s beds and 16 women’s beds. Gambill said the centers have had to reduce their bed capacity by half. Meanwhile, they’ve seen a 20 percent increase in new applicatio­ns for their services.

“We have less capacity and more people interested than ever,” he said.

Doctor appointmen­ts, counselor visits and even peer meetings have transition­ed from in-person to online.

Arkansas Take Back also launched a recovery social media show that has been airing Wednesdays on news stations as well, McGill said. It has continued in-person outreach where possible, McGill said.

Gambill and others said online video services come with positives and negatives. The recover center’s conversion from rehab to outpatient treatment has doubled, and meeting numbers have jumped up 3.5 times, Gambill said.

Some clients have had trouble getting over the technical hurdles while others may lack dependable internet or phone access, according to several service providers. For those who are able to connect, it has made meetings more convenient though less social and authentic, some said.

Jeannie, 59, drives an hour from her home to the Center for Addiction Services and Treatment at the University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences for drug screenings and check-ins. She did same for peer meetings, as well. She has had to go without seeing many family members, including her grandchild­ren, when they tested positive for the virus and worries about catching it or giving it unknowingl­y when going to appointmen­ts.

“When you’ve been at it two years, you don’t want anything get in the way of that. But covid puts a lot of fear in my mind,” said Jeannie, who did not want her last name used over privacy concerns.

Some clients worry about catching covid at the UAMS clinic because they associate it with the hospital and sick patients. The clinic has no interactio­n with admitted covid patients, does its own screening and is one of the safest places someone can be, program Director Michael J. Mancino said.

He said the clinic’s staff

has been surprised by how many patients are able to access online options. They have also brought people to the clinic and put them in rooms for Zoom meetings to limit interactio­n.

Worried about the virus, Jeannie attends peer groups online through UAMS. She misses seeing everyone in person and giving a hug when needed. However, Jeannie said she may still attend online occasional­ly after in-person meetings start up again if the weather is bad or she doesn’t have time for the commute. Routine is a big thing, she said.

“There are people that you can touch base with and Arkansas groups you can find online. So don’t isolate yourself,” she said. “On these groups, people exchange numbers. People will be more than happy to do it as they have been for me.

“Recovery has changed my world and my family’s world. Everyone around me is proud of me, and I know what I was going through. I was alive but I wasn’t living. Ask for help. It will be the best thing you ever do.”

Online options will stick around if not increase post-pandemic, according to service providers.

“It was on DHS radar before, but covid forced us to look at how important telehealth was,” said Patricia Gann, deputy director at Arkansas Department of Human Services Mental Health and Addiction Services.

Even as sober-living residents take care and use covid testing, many applicants may find themselves on a sixmonth waiting list, like those at Humbled Hearts.

“We need the room,” said Jim Creager, Humbled Hearts men’s director. “People are dying, because they can’t get in. We can’t save them all, but what’s the price of one?”

FUNDING, THE FUTURE

The Department of Human Services has worked to expand access to treatment for substance abuse issues both through its Medicaid program and through grant- funded programs, spokeswoma­n Marci Manley said.

“For example, as part of our Outpatient Behavioral Health Treatment transforma­tion, all Medicaid-eligible clients have access to an array of outpatient-based substance use services. We’ve also worked to expand the

availabili­ty of Medication Assisted Treatment and have significan­tly grown that provider base across the state,” Manley said. “DHS also contracts with 7 providers across the state to offer substance use treatment for those who may not have another payer source.”

Mancino said he sees patients who pay with cash because they don’t have insurance, have lost jobs or can no longer afford treatment.

“We’ve tried to work with people, to give them scholarshi­ps, but that’s not a sustainabl­e model,” he said. “Rent’s still due and there’s groceries to buy. The thing that gets dropped is substance use disorder treatment.”

Programs that don’t meet the level of care that requires a license or allows them to benefit from government funding are financiall­y struggling to stay open.

Vickie Poulson opened Jeremiah Recovery House in 2013. The group now runs a two-year women’s program in Green Forest, housing about four to six women at a time. It provides connection­s to resources for physical, mental, legal, financial, educationa­l, employment and life skills, Poulson said.

“Our fundraisin­g abilities were affected greatly with big losses in our major fundraiser­s all due to covid restrictio­ns. We have not been able to introduce the women to as many opportunit­ies due to social gathering restrictio­ns,” Paulson said.

Earnhart said Humbled Hearts has faced the same challenges, and she is concerned about the future if funding doesn’t pick up. The organizati­on recently added more men’s rooms for a total of five women’s rooms and nine men’s rooms. She estimates the faith-based nonprofit has helped around 500 people in their recoveries.

Poulson said she could easily open two more houses, provided she had the resources.

“The need is far more than most people know,” she said. “I am proud to say Arkansas is starting to address this need but we need help. Financial help, volunteer help, mentor help, teacher help, dental help, medical help, mental health help, legal help, and resources for housing, clothing and food.”

Several residents described Humbled Hearts and their sober living experience­s as a lifeline.

 ??  ?? Marika Shields, women’s director at Humbled Hearts in Harrison, shares her experience­s with a group.
(Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Ashton Eley)
Marika Shields, women’s director at Humbled Hearts in Harrison, shares her experience­s with a group. (Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Ashton Eley)

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