The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Addiction programs adapt to pandemic, increased need

Torrington mobile service expected back on road soon, state says

- By Elizabeth Heubeck CONN. HEALTH I-TEAM WRITER

A National Institutes of Health examinatio­n earlier this year of death certificat­es in the U.S. showed a sharp rise in alcohol-related deaths between 1999 and 2017.

Connecticu­t mirrored those numbers, and addiction organizati­ons stepped up their efforts to reach those in need.

Then came the pandemic. Treatment centers, support groups and the state suddenly were ordered to shut down.

“We like to say the opposite of addiction is connection,” said Thomas Russo, spokesman for the Connecticu­t Community for Addiction Recovery . “We are still here to support the recovery community.”

For people struggling with addiction, the pan

demic brings unique challenges. Anxiety can trigger an urge to indulge, as can the loneliness brought on by social distancing and sheltering in place.

Sales of alcoholic beverages have skyrockete­d during the pandemic, according to the research firm Nielsen. Online alcohol sales were up by 243 percent in the seven-week period ending April 18 over the same period a year ago, and brick-and-mortar alcohol sales were up by 21 percent for the same period, Nielsen reported. There were three times as many online buyers in the two weeks ending April 18 than there were in the two weeks ending Feb. 29, according to Nielsen.

At CCAR’s Bridgeport location, the busiest of its five centers, Russo said about 16,000 people come through its doors annually.

“These places are pillars in the community,” Russo said.

In early June, the centers began a partial reopening, with limited hours, services and capacity. Russo said the facility is open from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., with reduced capacity, temperatur­es taken at the door and masks required. He said they are doing some things, such as recovery coaching, on the facility’s porch, and said CCAR will offer full services, and be open from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., beginning the week of July 13.

While the facility was closed due to COVID-19 restrictio­ns, the staff worked tirelessly to continue to reach the people who rely on CCAR, Russo said. They created Facebook groups for each center from CCAR’s main Facebook page (ccar4recov­ery), stepped up existing telephone recovery

support services, and began holding virtual meetings. The number of participan­ts varies; on the high end, some sessions have had up to 50 attendees, Russo said.

Like CCAR, Alcoholics Anonymous offered digital meetings when live meetings were banned. Establishe­d AA groups also regularly maintain contact via phone, email and social media. For people in every stage of recovery, it’s critical that addiction services continue outreach efforts during this social isolation period, Russo said.

The NIH analysis of death certificat­es found that the rate of alcoholrel­ated deaths among people ages 16 and older doubled, from 35,914 to 72,558, between 1999 and 2017.

The National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism said an estimated 88,000 people (approximat­ely 62,000 men and 26,000 women) die from alcohol-related causes annually, making alcohol the third-leading preventabl­e cause of death in the United States. The first is tobacco. The second is poor diet and physical inactivity.

According to the United Health Foundation’s 2019 annual health rankings, in Connecticu­t, 15.7 percent of women and 22.6 percent of men reported drinking to excess.

The state works to reach residents struggling with addiction problems, both alcohol- and drug-related, where they live and work.

“We are a leader in the promulgati­on of innovative strategies to help people access treatment,” said Miriam Delphin-Rittmon, commission­er of the state Department of Mental Health and Addiction Services.

Significan­t overlap exists between alcohol and drug users, as the NIH analysis revealed. In 2017, the nation’s

overdose deaths from a combinatio­n of alcohol and other drugs totaled 10,596, about 15 percent of total alcohol-related deaths.

DMHAS has responded to data that points to community need. In 2019, as part of its street-based medication­assisted treatment initiative, it launched a program that regularly deploys an RV and three vans to highneed spots in Hartford, Bridgeport, Torrington and the greater Milford area. Using federal funds allotted through a State Opioid Response grant, DMHAS provides approximat­ely $200,000 to operate and staff each van.

Normally, the vans are wellequipp­ed with staff and resources. Onsite physicians and allied health profession­als provide medical evaluation­s, recovery coaching as needed, prescripti­ons for one to two days of buprenorph­ine (Suboxone), offers for refills on subsequent days, and related education.

During the state’s lockdown, the mobile units changed the way they operate, and the Torrington and Milford vans ceased operations. The medical personnel who work on the RV serving Hartford communicat­e with individual­s through a screen door unless they are seeking treatment. Then individual­s come into the van one at a time, said Mark Jenkins, founder of the Greater Hartford Harm Reduction Coalition.

“We are posting on Twitter and Facebook the number to contact us for treatment,” said Marcy Hotchkiss of Bridges Healthcare, which operates the Milford-based mobile clinic. Both the Torrington and Milford vans should begin operations very soon, said Lauren Siembab, opioid services coordinato­r for DMHAS.

 ?? Contribute­d photo ?? Bridges Healthcare’s MATT’s Van.
Contribute­d photo Bridges Healthcare’s MATT’s Van.

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