The Haven

HAVEN THE

Residental PROGRAM

PLACE A SAFE

our Outpatient PROGRAM

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specializing in addiction recovery

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974 E. South Temple Salt Lake City, UT 84102

801-533-0070

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974 E. South Temple , Salt Lake City Salt Lake City, UT 84102 Strong leadership constitutes strong results. We will get you through this.

Together.

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VISION H elp people find their path to recovery by creating a safe Haven to call home. GOALS E xpand services so that we can better serve our community and ensure that the services we provide are evidence based. W e offer residential treatment services, as well as safe and supportive transitional housing in The Haven’s Sober Living Program. We provide services for veterans, individuals with little to no income, justice involved, and who are homeless or have unstable and unsupportive housing.

974 E. South Temple Salt Lake City, UT 84102 801-533-0070 Call Us Today!

Still Effective After All These Years After 80 years, AA still works

For those seeking to break free from addiction to drugs and alcohol, one of the most widely used -- and easily accessible -- tools has been the Twelve Steps, first published in 1939 in the book,”Alcoholics Anonymous: The Story of How More Than One Hundred Men Have Recovered from Alcoholism.” Not much has changed since 1939, in what the Twelve Steps require of individuals, in order to regain control of their lives. The process, known to its adherents as “working the steps,” involves taking individual responsibility for one’s actions, admitting that one is powerless to control the addiction, and seeking the help of a higher power in order to heal. The benefits of the Twelve Step method are widely known: acceptance into a fellowship of non-users who regularly attend meetings to discuss their addictions, face their actions, and atone for them through spiritual practice and forgiveness. Although Alcoholics Anonymous and its many offshoots do not conduct or allow others to conduct research into the effectiveness of the methods, the military has produced studies that show individuals who attend meetings are 60% more likely to achieve sobriety than those who do not.

Millions of men and women around the world have used the Twelve Steps to break free from a wide variety of addictions and compulsions. More than 200 self-help organizations around the world have adopted twelve-step principles for help with compulsion for, and/or addiction to, gambling, crime, food, sex, hoarding, debting and over-working, among others.

Where did the Twelve Steps come from? According to an article published by AA co-founder Bill W. in 1953, there were three primary sources of inspiration: the Oxford Groups, Dr. William D. Silkworth of Towns Hospital and the famed psychologist, William James, widely considered the father of modern psychology. The Oxford Groups, an evangelical movement which became popular in the 1920’s and early 30’s, preached concepts like absolute honesty, absolute purity, absolute unselfishness and absolute love. “The Twelve Steps could be considered a personal roadmap for achieving sobriety and serenity.”

Combining science and spirituality William James’ major contribution to the philosophical underpinnings of AA was his book “Varieties of Religious Experience.” In his book, James provided scientific validation for the concept of spiritual experiences, which he said could transform people and enable them to overcome personal defeat and find recovery. The Twelve Steps could be considered a personal roadmap for achieving sobriety and serenity and living a life of freedom from addiction to alcohol and drugs. Each of the steps is only one sentence in length, but each one contains enough universally applicable wisdom and power to fill a book. While the 12 steps has provided a path to recovery for countless alcoholics, drug addicts and others seeking to break free from addictive or compulsive behavior, they have also sparked controversy and debate over the decades. The major source of controversy is AA’s longstanding emphasis on a belief in God. AA supporters point out that, in the AA context, that means belief in “a higher power,” a belief in something larger than the self. The phrase was coined in the early years of AA.

They also practiced a type of confession, which they called “sharing,” the making of amends for harms done they called “restitution.” They believed in the value of “quiet time,” a form of meditation and seeking of God’s guidance, practiced in both group and individual settings. Dr. Silkworth spent years helping alcoholics dry out at Towns Hospital in New York City. One of his core beliefs, which he often spoke on, was the disease concept of alcoholism -- defined as an obsession of the mind combined with an allergy of the body.

“’Higher power’ doesn’t necessarily mean a deity, and those who use the steps are free to interpret that phrase as they see fit.”

“Higher power” doesn’t necessarily have to mean a deity, and that those who use the steps are free to interpret that phrase as they see fit, based on their personal beliefs. The phrase could be applied to mean the power of the group, or nature. Some AA members around the world who don’t accept faith in a god as a necessary tenet have formed their own agnostic AA groups. More than 90 unofficial, self-described “agnostic AA” groups now meet regularly in the U.S., according to Patheos.com. The debate continues. Some think the 82-year old organization has drifted away from its core principles and become too lenient, Lee Ann Kaskutas, senior scientist at the Public Health Institute’s Alcohol Research Group in Emeryville, Calif., told CharismaNews.com. “Others think it’s too strict, so they want to change AA and make it get with the times.” Newcomers to AA are often advised to “take what you need and leave the rest,” Kaskutas points out. That flexibility allows participants to put together a recovery program that fits their needs. It’s one of the reason AA still works for people, eight decades after its founding.

12 STEP MEETINGS

12 step meetings are designed to help clients become afflicted with and actively involved in 12-step- self-help groups, thereby promoting abstinence. These meetings are held several days throughout the week.

974 E. South Temple Salt Lake City, UT 84102

havenhelps.com

INDIVIDUALIZED CASE MANAGEMENT Individualized case management is provided by our Certified Peer Support Specialists in order to link clients to needed resources. This includes but is not limited to; housing, financial budgeting, resume building, obtaining documentation, legal etc.

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801-533-0070

974 E. South Temple Salt Lake City, UT 84102 It’s time to walk the path of recovery.

Our vision is to help people find their path to recovery by creating a safe Haven to call home.

Y

C O

O

Call Us Today!

801-533-0070

WHAT TO BRING TO TREATMENT

974 E. South Temple Salt Lake City, UT 84102

WHAT TO LEAVE AT HOME

THINGS TO LEAVE

• Excessive clothing and other belongings. Storage space is limited. • Drugs and/or alcohol. • All medications will be given directly to staff upon admission into residential treatment. • Any toiletry item containing alcohol. • Weapons of any kind. • Candles • Cell phone (You will be required to turn in your cell phone and we will keep that secured for you while you are here in treatment). You will have a phone available for your use that The Haven provides. • Laptop, tablet, or any other electronic device that could be internet accessible. • Vapes or electronic cigarettes. • Clothing that displays offensive and/or vulgar language or images, promotes the use of drugs and alcohol, or is sexually explicit in any way. • Items of personal value such as: jewelry, money, and other items that are not replaceable.

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INSERT 6 Learning to Drink

Study finds alcohol changes the brain from the very first drink

“Drugs of abuse basically hijack the normal learning and memory processes.” - Dr. Dorit Ron University of California - San Francisco

Preventing escalation

The NIAAA-funded study did not establish a relationship between initial use and addiction, or even problematic drinking. But the hope is that further understanding of how alcohol affects the brain initially could lead to better treatment and prevention efforts down the road. “If we can control that step, we may be able to prevent further escalation,” Dr. Ron says. More research is needed to determine which other components of the brain are affected by initial alcohol exposure. Dr. Ron says she believes the changes that occur during first exposure could be reversed with prolonged abstinence from alcohol. But she said the more a person drinks, the harder it is to reverse those changes as the brain forms stronger connections to drinking.

One drink is all it takes. That’s what one research team found when studying how even the first exposure to alcohol can affect a person’s brain. A team from the University of California - San Francisco exposed mice to alcohol and then studied the synapses (connections) in their brains. The team found that even the first drink produced significant changes in the brain’s biological structure, calling the changes a “learning event.” “This is basically the first step,” says Dr. Dorit Ron, one of the chief researchers. “You are basically placing a memory trace.” Dr. Ron says the entire study was based on the idea that “addiction, and not just alcohol addiction, is thought to be a maladaptive form of learning and memory.” In essence, the study showed that first exposure to alcohol primes the brain for further use and lays the foundation for future “learning.” “Drugs of abuse basically hijack the normal learning and memory processes,” Dr. Ron says. “The behavior becomes habit.”

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Predicting behavior

INSERT 6 A new study also suggests that the earlier a person starts drinking, the stronger those connections may become. Researchers recently set out to identify which substance people use first in their lives and found the majority of people try alcohol before any other substance. The team also looked at how a person’s age when they start drinking affects substance use later in life. Researchers say the earlier someone starts drinking, the more likely they are to use more than one illicit substance, and they’re also more likely to develop an addiction. “It’s a very nice predictor for polysubstance use,” says Dr. Adam Barry, the study’s chief author. “The later you delay, the closer you are to 21, the less likely you are to be alcohol dependent or dependent on other substances.”

“ Alcohol consumption among youth doesn’t occur in a vacuum. ” - Dr. Adam Barry, Texas A&M University

Curbing use Researchers acknowledge there’s a difference between a first sip and a first binge drinking event. But they say age at first use of any kind is still a good predictor of behavior later in life. To combat problematic drinking, Dr. Barry says educators need to address all factors of a child’s life, not just the substance itself. In keeping with new guidelines from the National Institute on Drug Abuse, Dr. Barry and his team recommend beginning substance education as early as third grade. “Alcohol consumption among youth doesn’t occur in a vacuum,” Dr. Barry says. “It’s really just trying to find evidence-based strategies that prevent drug use and then applying those in an alcohol setting.”

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DON’T DROWN WITH YOUR SUBSTANCE ABUSE.

BREAK FREE.

havenhelps.com

974 E. South Temple Salt Lake City, UT 84102

T he Havens Residential Program has been in operation since 1969 providing quality care and treatment services to a diverse population that is 18 years of age and older. The organization prides itself on using evidence based treatment models in order to help the individual heal from the issues associated with their use. The Havens primarily a Substance Use Disorder facility, but also deals with issues related to trauma, life skills, housing, access to healthcare, family reunification, legal, employment, mental health and pro-social peer groups. The Haven is able to provide these services because we employ only the most highly trained and educated individuals on our clinical team. These clinicians are not only educated, but certified in the modalities they are facilitating. This team consists of Masters Level Therapists, Psychologist, Substance Use Disorder Counselors, Licensed Mental Health Therapist and Peer Support Specialists. This dynamic team is able to facilitate and implement programing that fits the needs of each individual enrolled in services.

CALL US TODAY!

801-533-0070

O ur goal is to expand services so that we can better serve our community and ensure that the services we provide are evidence based.

Call Us Today!

801-533-0070

974 E. South Temple , Salt Lake City, UT 84102

havenhelps.com VISIT:

O ur outpatient program will

drastically reduce the potential for relapse and ensure a healthy transition back into main-stream society that may not support the same values and goals developed while in treatment. In our outpatient program you will find strong, like-minded individuals who have decided to participate in

order to make recovery from drugs and alcohol a number one priority in their lives.

FIGHTING FIRE WITH FIRE

D espite years of stigma, medication-assisted treatment (MAT) is steadily gaining in popularity among treatment providers. Government groups like the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services are actively campaigning to get more providers to offer MAT as a potentially vital resource for patients. While such groups often promote well-known medications such as methadone and buprenorphine, drug researchers are looking for new medications that could be a lifeline to patients in need. But new medications can cost millions to research and take years to get on the market. That’s why some researchers are taking a closer look, and finding success, with drugs already approved by the FDA. CURBING COCAINE USE Researchers at the University of Pennsylvania say a drug already on the market for diabetes may be able to curb cocaine use. The FDA-approved drug Byetta, used to regulate blood sugar in diabetic patients, is derived from a natural hormone known as GLP-1. The research team looked at how the hormone functioned in rats and found that the same hormone that regulates food intake could be used to suppress cocaine consump- tion. “These results are very provocative and suggest these compounds could be repurposed for drug addiction,” says Dr. Heath Schmidt, one of the lead researchers. “We have seen a reduction in cocaine consumption…but it doesn’t completely abolish it.” Currently, there is no FDA-approved drug for the treatment of cocaine abuse. But because Byetta and a similar drug have already gained federal approval, researchers say that leaves fewer hurdles before they could be used in treatment settings. Although still far from human trials, research- ers say they’re optimistic, especially because their research suggests the hormone is not specific to cocaine and could be used in treatment of other substance abuse disorders. “I think this opens up a large world view with regards to this system in the brain,” Dr. Schmidt says. “There’s really a lot to be explored here and I think it’s really an exciting time to be in the field and exploring the GLP- 1 system.”

ADJUSTING ALCOHOL CONSUMPTION Another team of researchers at the University of Queensland in Australia believe the FDA-approved drug pindolol could be used to stop alcohol abuse. Pindolol is an anti-hypertensive medication used to treat high blood pres- sure. But because of the way it interacts with neurotransmit- ters in the brain, they believe it could also be effective in treating alcohol use disorders (AUDs). To study the drug’s effect, the team used mice and exposed them to an alcohol consump- tion regimen similar to a binge drinking cycle common in humans. For mice also given pindolol, the team found they were able to reduce drinking in the long term (after at least 12 weeks). The team did not see as positive of results in the short term (only four weeks), but they say they’re still excited about its potential uses. “Although further mechanistic investigations are required, this study demonstrates the poten- tial of pindolol as a new treat- ment option for AUDs that can be fast-tracked into human clin- ical studies,” the authors wrote.

O ur housing program is a safe place.

T he Havens facilities are fully licensed and operate

with the upmost ethical standards. The program is run by our skilled team of professionals that are trained in case management and certified as Peer Support Specialists. Our housing program offers a safe place for individuals to live, so they can take the needed steps towards self-sufficiency. The Havens sober living is safe, affordable and located near public transit, which makes it an ideal setting for individuals to live. The housing units come fully furnished, with internet, cable and all utilities covered by The Haven.

974 E. South Temple Salt Lake City, UT 84102

C all U s

TODAY:

801-533-0070

T he Havens sober living offers a recovery peer support group that is like no other housing facility in Utah. We have a large alumni association that helps bring people into the community and engage them with the recovery process.

Requirements for housing is that an individual comes directly from a treatment program, meets the sobriety requirement, is able to pass urine analysis tests, obtain gainful employment, pay for housing and maintain personal conduct associated with the rules of residency.

You know you need help. We know we can help you. Call Us Today!

974 E. South Temple Salt Lake City, UT 84102

801-533-0070

havenhelps.com

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