Substance Use Recovery
Need help with a substance use disorder?
Our peer support specialists are available to offer the FREE, non-judgemental support you need!
If you or someone you love is struggling, don't wait!
Contact one of our peer support specialists today!
Peer Support Specialists
Joey Peterson
Ruben Watts
Jade Nielson
(985) 922-3422
Services
Peer Support Services
Our peer support specialists are available for free 24/7 to offer recovery support.
They are ready to help assist individuals throughout their recovery journey with education, career opportunities, the transition from different treatment settings, and in developing skills needed to facilitate treatment and recovery.
Our specialists are available for one-on-one support or at weekly support group meetings.
For more information contact Joey Peterson or Ruben Watts.
Addictions Counselor
Our Addictions Counselor meets with individuals to evaluate their mental and physical health, addiction, and/or other problematic behaviors.
Sessions can be one-on-one or in a group setting and are free.
Our counselor can help refer individuals to support groups and find other community resources as needed, as well as, collaborate with individuals' family members to help monitor and track recovery.
We can also help assist with finding jobs, reestablishing one's career, and tracking and analyzing recovery progression.
For more information contact Becky Stogner.
Other Services
We also provide community prevention programs, training in Adverse Childhood Experiences, training in Mental Health First Aid, and a guide of available community resources.
We provide screening, brief intervention, and referral to treatment for providers, assist individuals in finding and navigating affordable treatment for recovery from substance misuse, increase access to naloxone for first responders and community members, and work to decrease negative stigma and misunderstandings of substance use disorders.
For more information contact Rhonda Gunnell.
Peer Support Group
Meetings are held weekly on Thursdays at 12 pm
357 Austin St, Bogalusa, LA
Project ADAPT RCORP Staff
Peer Support Specialist, Joey Peterson
Peer Support Specialist, Ruben Watts
Peer Support Specialist, Jade Nielson
(985) 922-3422
Office Assistant, Shawn Singletary
Data Coordinator, Cheryl Bruton
ADAPT, Inc. Awarded HRSA Grant
ADAPT, Inc. has been awarded the Rural Communities Opioid Response Program (RCORP) grant with a start date of September 1, 2022. RCORP is a multi-year initiative by the Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) aimed at reducing the morbidity and mortality of substance use disorder (SUD), including opioid use disorder (OUD) in high-risk rural communities. The HRSA grant that has been awarded to ADAPT, Inc. is renewable for four consecutive years at $500,000 per year. ADAPT, Inc. will be the lead agency in implementing Project ADAPT (All Deserve Advocacy, Prevention, & Treatment). Other organizations who will be partnering with ADAPT, Inc. in the implementation of the grant includes: Florida Parishes Human Services Authority (FPHSA), Southeast Louisiana Volunteers of America (VOA), Our Lady of the Angels Hospital (OLOAH), Washington Parish Sheriff’s Office, and B.B. “Sixty” Rayburn Correctional Center. This grant will be wide-reaching into the community, involving parish leaders, organizations, rural health care providers, behavioral health care providers and residents to reduce SUD/OUD among the citizens of Washington Parish.
More than 100,000 drug overdose deaths occurred in the United States in the 12 months ending in April 2021, the highest number of overdose deaths ever recorded in a 12-month period, according to recent provisional data from CDC. From 1999 through 2019, the rate of drug overdose deaths increased from 4.0 per 100,000 to 19.6 in rural counties. Washington Parish is number one in the state for opioid overdose deaths per capita. Rural communities face significant challenges in meeting the behavioral health needs of those at risk for and/or experiencing SUD/OUD. Rural residents who use opioids are more likely than their urban counterparts to have socioeconomic vulnerabilities, including limited educational attainment, poor health status, lack of health insurance, and low income, which further limit their abilities to access treatment.
Over the course of a four-year period of performance, RCORP award recipients will implement activities that are aligned with the following overarching program goals:
1) Address structural- and systems-level barriers to improve rural residents’ access to quality, integrated SUD/OUD services.
2) Improve the quality and sustainability of rural behavioral health care services through supporting rural health care providers to offer coordinated, evidence-based, trauma-informed SUD/OUD services.
3) Improve the capacity of the behavioral health care system to address rural community risk factors and social determinants of health that affect the behavioral health of rural residents.
Some specific activities to be addressed by Project ADAPT include:
1) Convening conversations with parish leaders, state policy makers, and others on improving broadband access in rural target areas.
2) Utilizing the Health Information Technology (HIT) to provide residents with the choice of using telehealth visit or in-person visits.
3) Employment of a Peer Support Specialist and Substance Abuse Counselor to provide direct services to the SUD/OUD population.
4) Provide comprehensive, evidence-based community prevention programs.
5) Promote and schedule Mental Health First Aid (MHFA) training in the community.
6) Make training available to individuals and groups on using naloxone for harm reduction.
7) Create opportunities for people affected by the opioid epidemic to tell their stories. Citizens need to see substance use disorder not as a moral failing, but as a chronic medical condition that affects a person’s brain.
Rusty Fornea, Executive Director, announced that Rhonda Gunnell will serve as the project director and can be contacted for additional information. According to Fornea, this grant funding provides a great opportunity for the community to become more active in combating the problems of substance and opioid use disorders.
Grand Opening photos were taken by Sharon Jan Thomas Hartzog.