Pubdate: Fri, 22 Nov 2002 Source: Scarborough Mirror, The (CN ON) Copyright: 2002 The Scarborough Mirror Contact: http://www.insidetoronto.ca/to/scarborough/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2198 Author: Susan O'Neill Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/rehab.htm (Treatment) SUBSTANCE ABUSE PROGRAM TARGETS WOMEN IN NEED Local women recovering from substance abuse will soon be able to access a parenting and relapse prevention program close to home. The Scarborough OASIS Addiction Recovery Society is partnering with the local office of the Salvation Army Homestead to offer a new program for women, which is slated to begin in January. "We wanted to offer something different," said Leslie Bernard of Homestead during a recent interview at the OASIS office on Eglinton Avenue. She said the joint project will include a parenting group, which will run for two mornings a week, and a relapse prevention program, which will be held during two afternoon sessions each week. "We want to be able to serve the communities that are under served," Bernard said. The program will help mothers in recovery develop their parenting skills while offering support in creating strategies to prevent a relapse. "Ninety-nine per cent of the time when it comes to the addiction it is the woman who is the primary caregiver," said MaryAnn Poulos of OASIS. "Men in recovery for the most part are not the primary caregiver ... they are transient." Bernard and Poulos said the program will aim to look at the woman's whole life while helping them through their recovery. "We want to be working on something that keeps the children with the mother. So the children will stay in or return to the home," Bernard said. Both of the agencies are relatively new to the area. "It's really difficult to bring new services to an area that is so historically under served because people are so used to thinking there is nothing here," Poulos said. "We want it to be as easy to refer someone in Scarborough as it is to refer someone in Toronto," she said, noting Scarborough is the most under served community in Toronto when it comes to addiction services. The Scarborough OASIS project, which officially opened its doors at 3160 Eglinton Ave. last month, is one of seven new addiction treatment services that have grown out of the Scarborough Addiction Services Partnership (SASP), formed in the spring of 2001 to address the shortfall of treatment services in Scarborough. "We've been building very fast," said Felix Munger, manager of SASP. However, he reports provincial funding for the project will end in March of 2003. "At the end of the day we want to serve the clients in Scarborough who have not had the opportunity (to access services close to home)," he said. Poulos said OASIS aims to provide a supportive and safe environment for people in recovery from alcohol and drug addictions, while offering several other support services such as workshops aimed at women and their families. "This was all built by people in recovery, by volunteers. It was a totally open space," said Poulos of the agency's facilities, which include a resource room, a boardroom, a cafE area and office space. "People believed in the principle of why we needed to be here and it's amazing what they did." The Scarborough Satellite program of Homestead, which began operating in the fall of 2001 at 1225 Kennedy Rd., offers a range of services to help women with chemical dependency including group counseling, life skills programs, addiction education, conflict resolution, continuing care, relapse prevention and anger management. The two agencies are hoping to hire a local woman to serve as an outreach worker to spread the word about the new parenting and relapse prevention program, Bernard said. For information about the outreach worker's position or about the agencies and the services they offer, call Homestead at 416-431-8247 or OASIS at 416-265-3661. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom