Consumers’ Experiences in Dual Focus Mutual Aid for Co-occurring Substance Use and Mental Health Disorders

Author:

Matusow Harlan1,Guarino Honoria1,Rosenblum Andrew1,Vogel Howard2,Uttaro Thomas3,Khabir Sadiqua4,Rini Martin5,Moore Thomas5,Magura Stephen6

Affiliation:

1. National Development and Research Institutes, New York, NY.

2. Double Trouble in Recovery, Inc. West Palm Beach, FL.

3. New York eHealth Collaborative, New York, NY.

4. Bowery Residents’ Committee, New York, NY.

5. Cherry St. Health Services, Grand Rapids, MI.

6. The Evaluation Center, Western Michigan University, Kalamazoo, MI.

Abstract

Mutual aid fellowships have been shown to improve outcomes for those with co-occurring substance use and mental illness disorders. Processes associated with usefulness include helper therapy (the assumption of a helping role to foster commitment) and reciprocal learning (the sharing of problems and solutions among members). The present qualitative investigation used focus groups comprised a subset of participants in Double Trouble in Recovery (DTR), a 12-step mutual aid group for those with co-occurring disorders, to gather their subjective perceptions of the groups. Participants emphasized that in linking them to others with similar problems, the DTR groups played a vital emotional role in their lives and provided a needed venue for information sharing that might have been otherwise unavailable.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health

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