Sep 17, 2019 RWJBarnabas Health Increases Access to Critical Recovery Support Services

September Marks National Recovery Month

West Orange, NJ –RWJBarnabas Health (RWJBH) is making a positive impact for individuals coping with addiction. Taking a proactive, multi-disciplinary approach to combating substance use disorder, RWJBarnabas Health is focused on clinically treating the disorder as a disease and is eliminating the stigma of addiction across its hospitals, health facilities and in the communities it proudly serves.

“Our goal is to increase access to education, prevention, treatment and recovery services so that individuals with substance use disorder have both a safe place to go for help and access to critical support services to help them on their path to recovery,” said Jennifer Velez, Executive Vice President, Community and Behavioral Health, RWJBarnabas Health and Co-Chair of the Tackling Addiction Task Force.

Across the system, RWJBH has committed to reducing the number of opioid prescriptions prescribed by actively participating in the Deliberate Reduction of Opioid Prescriptions (DROP) initiative with 25,380 fewer emergency department patients and 21,116 fewer inpatients receiving an opioid at discharge over the past 18 months. As of May 2019, only 3.81 percent of patients discharged from RWJBH emergency departments were prescribed opioids compared to the national average of 17 percent. Additionally, RWJBH’s Prescription Monitoring Program links to electronic health records alerting emergency room physicians of patients who have recently received opioid prescriptions at another health facility.

“Prevention is a powerful tool in the fight against substance use disorder,” said Christopher Freer, DO, FACEP, RWJBarnabas Health Director of Emergency Services and Co-Chair of the Tackling Addiction Task Force. “By reducing opioid prescriptions across our continuum of care we’re able to educate patients about the risk that opioids present and provide alternative treatment options to ensure that the appropriate level of care is met.”

Soon, RWJBH will begin offering Naloxone, a medication used to counter the effects of opioid overdose, across all of its retail pharmacies without requiring a prescription, thus expanding access to the life-saving medication in the communities it serves.

“We’re looking at tackling addiction from every angle and not just from inside our hospital walls,” added Dr. Freer. “There is no one solution to this epidemic which is why we’re taking a multidisciplinary approach to fighting it. Providing Naloxone across our retail pharmacies will increase access to the life-saving medication potentially giving someone an opportunity to receive the help they need to start their road to recovery.”

RWJBH physicians are initiating, stabilizing and re-stabilizing patients through medication-assisted treatment (MAT), which has become the gold standard of substance use disorder care. Buprenorphine, which is used in MAT to help individuals reduce or quit their use of heroin or other opiates, is available for acute opiate withdrawal management. Additionally, all patients who receive Buprenorphine are given a warm hand-off to a peer recovery specialist for appropriate care and follow-up.

RWJBH employs over 90 Peer Recovery Specialists who are full-time hospital staff and are each in active recovery from substance use disorder themselves, for a minimum of four years or more. The Peer Recovery Specialists draw from their own experiences to support all patients who are in active addiction.

“Our Peer Recovery Specialists are powerful advocates and allies for individuals with substance use disorder. Their own lived experience coupled with their training enables them to meet individuals where they are at and provide a level of understanding and support that has proven to be critical to getting individuals to believe there is hope and to accept help,” said Ms. Velez. “The work they do is truly life-saving and makes an incredible difference.”

RWJBH’s peer recovery program provides 24/7 hospital-based recovery support services for all patients who present with substance use disorder. A full continuum of care is provided for individuals who accept help including peer support, clinical navigation and care management which continue in community-based settings.

“Since we began our peer recovery program in January 2016, our Peer Recovery Specialists have connected with over 21,000 patients who identified with a substance use disorder. Over 80 percent of those patients accepted services and 40 percent of patients accepted the next level of care,” Dr. Freer noted.

“We’ve lost too many lives to this epidemic and the statistics can be daunting,” said Ms. Velez. “But we are making progress. We see people every day accepting help and by increasing access to care, more and more are finding their path to recovery. We’re not giving up and they shouldn’t either. We’re here to help them. That’s the message we want to share this Recovery Month – that there is hope and there is help.”

RWJBarnabas Health Institute for Prevention and Recovery also facilitates ALL-Recovery meetings across the system. These meetings are open to anyone in the community who is in active recovery, has a loved one in active recovery, and those who are generally interested in recovery support.

Recovery Month is an annual celebration sponsored each September by the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAHSA) designed to provide a platform to educate the public on substance abuse and to show that recovery is possible.

RWJBarnabas Health is raising awareness about substance use disorder and reducing the stigma of disease. Join us as we celebrate those in recovery by wearing purple on September 26 in honor of Recovery Month.

To learn more about the RWJBarnabas Health Institute for Prevention and Recovery and all available recovery resources and services, call 1-833-233-4377 or visit www.RWJBH.org/preventionandrecovery.

ABOUT RWJBARNABAS HEALTH
RWJBarnabas Health is the largest, most comprehensive academic health care system in New Jersey, with a service area covering nine counties with five million people. The system includes eleven acute care hospitals – Clara Maass Medical Center in Belleville, Community Medical Center in Toms River, Jersey City Medical Center in Jersey City, Monmouth Medical Center in Long Branch, Monmouth Medical Center Southern Campus in Lakewood, Newark Beth Israel Medical Center in Newark, RWJUH in New Brunswick, RWJUH Somerset in Somerville, RWJUH Hamilton, RWJUH Rahway and Saint Barnabas Medical Center in Livingston; three acute care children’s hospitals and a leading pediatric rehabilitation hospital with a network of outpatient centers, a freestanding 100-bed behavioral health center, two trauma centers, a satellite emergency department, ambulatory care centers, geriatric centers, the state’s largest behavioral health network, comprehensive home care and hospice programs, fitness and wellness centers, retail pharmacy services, a medical group, multi-site imaging centers and an accountable care organization.

RWJBarnabas Health is New Jersey’s largest private employer – with more than 34,000 employees, 9,000 physicians and 1,000 residents and interns – and routinely captures national awards for outstanding quality and safety. RWJBarnabas Health recently announced a partnership with Rutgers University to create New Jersey’s largest academic health care system. The collaboration will align RWJBarnabas Health with Rutgers’ education, research and clinical activities, including those at the Rutgers Cancer Institute of New Jersey - the state's only NCI-designated Comprehensive Cancer Center - and Rutgers University Behavioral Health Care.

Contact: Carrie Cristello
(973) 322-4924
CARRIE.CRISTELLO@RWJBH.ORG