What Is Recovery Capital? - Treatment Magazine A generally accepted definition of recovery capital is “the sum total of one’s resources that can be brought to bear on the initiation and maintenance of substance misuse cessation ” Community capital also has to do with the attitudes of community members and their openness to fully welcome people who are in recovery
Measuring capital in active addiction and recovery: the development of . . . termed ‘recovery capital’, originally defined as ‘the sum total of one’s resources that can be brought to bear on the initiation and maintenance of substance misuse ces-sation’ ([4] , p 1972]) Best and Laudet [5] have subse-quently suggested that recovery capital can be split into three domains of assets – personal recovery capital
Measuring capital in active addiction and recovery: the development of . . . Not only has recovery been difficult to capture, it is equally difficult to measure and this has led to the development of a metric for encapsulating recovery progress termed ‘recovery capital’, originally defined as ‘the sum total of one’s resources that can be brought to bear on the initiation and maintenance of substance misuse
Strengths Planning for Building Recovery Capital Building on the language of social capital (Putnam, 2001), recovery capital has been defined as “the sum total of one’s resources that can be brought to bear on the initiation and maintenance of substance misuse cessation” (Cloud Granfield, 2008, p 1972)
The importance of professionals and community members as recovery allies “The sum total of one’s resources that can be brought to bear on the initiation and maintenance of substance misuse cessation ” Recovery Capital Definition Personal Social Community Recovery Capital Cloud, W , Granfield, R (2008) Conceptualizing recovery capital: Expansion of a theoretical construct Substance use misuse, 43 (12
Using Recovery Capital to Predict Retention and Change in Recovery . . . The original definition of recovery capital is “the sum total of one’s resources that can be brought to bear on the initiation and maintenance of substance misuse cessation” (Cloud Granfield, 2008, 1972) In a 2017 systematic review of recovery capital literature and evidence, Hennessy (2017) identified 38 papers from 35 studies but
A tale of two towns: A comparative study exploring the possibilities . . . Cloud (2001) coined the term ‘recovery capital’, defined as 'the sum total of one’s resources that can be brought to bear on the initiation and maintenance of substance misuse cessation’ (Cloud and Granfield, 2008:1972) There are four components of recovery capital These are: social capital, referring to the
Community Supervision Within the Treatment Court Model Recovery capital is “the sum total of one’s resources that can be brought to bear on the initiation and maintenance of substance misuse cessation” (Cloud Granfield, 2008, p 1972; Zschau et al , 2016) Risk-need-responsivity (RNR) The risk-need-responsivity principles are the foundation of contemporary correctional practice
“I Don’t Know What Fun Is”: Examining the Intersection of Social . . . Whereas recovery capital was the “sum total of one’s resources that can be brought to bear on the initiation and maintenance of substance misuse cessation” (Cloud and Granfield, 2008, p 1985), social recovery brings the focus back on the relational action of acquiring needed resources by placing less emphasis on individual resources and
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