“You Don’t Get That from Professionals”: A Consumer-Led Peer Recovery Program for Families and Friends of Individuals with Alcohol and Other Drugs Use Issues in Darwin

Author:

Tari-Keresztes Noemi1ORCID,Armstrong Noelene2,Smith James A.1,Gupta Himanshu1,Goding Sam2,Endemann Sal-Amanda2

Affiliation:

1. Rural and Remote Health, College of Medicine & Public Health, Flinders University, Casuarina, NT 0815, Australia

2. Northern Territory Lived Experience Network, Darwin, NT 0820, Australia

Abstract

While there has been a reduction in alcohol consumption among Australians aged 18 years and above, about 25% of people still drink above the recommended limit. The use of alcohol and other drugs is a substantial issue in the Northern Territory; however, there have been significant investments in alcohol reforms over the past few years. This paper reports on a pilot study that involved co-designing, implementing, and evaluating the Circles of Support consumer-led recovery and empowerment program for families and friends of individuals with alcohol and other drugs use issues. The evaluation comprised a mixed-methods approach; however, this article only presents the qualitative component (n = 7). Interview data were thematically analysed, and four main themes were identified: (1) the value of a peer-to-peer approach; (2) facing challenges and distress; (3) adopting self-care strategies; and (4) the development of valuable skills. Participants enjoyed the program content and learning. This involved self-care and communication strategies, boundary setting, service navigation, the concept of post-traumatic growth, the circles of control, and the stages of change model for families. Our findings strongly support the scaling up of the program in Darwin and other locations across the Northern Territory and future program adaptation for different vulnerable target audiences.

Funder

Australian Government Department of Health

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

Reference54 articles.

1. Tari-Keresztes, N., Smith, J., and Gupta, H. (2021). Follow-Up Evaluation of the Peer-Led Education Pilot in Darwin, Menzies School of Health Research.

2. Tari-Keresztes, N., Armstrong, N., Smith, J., Gupta, H., Goding, S., Endemann, S.A., and Mulholland, K. (2022). Supporting Family Members’ and Friends’ Individual Recovery with a Locally Co-Designed Peer-Led Recovery Program in Darwin, Flinders University.

3. National Health and Medical Research Council (2020). Australian Guidelines to Reduce Health Risks from Drinking Alcohol.

4. Australian Bureau of Statistics (2020–2021). Alcohol Consumption.

5. Australian Institute of Health and Welfare (2020). National Drug Strategy Household Survey 2019.

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