Overview of the Recovery Model
Dimensions that Support Recoveryme
Principles of the Recovery Model !
Principles of the Recovery Model 2
Steps to Recovery
100

What model focuses on mainly mainly on the person’s diagnosis and treating symptons

What is the Medical Model

100

This can provide support, friendships, love and hope

What are Community Relationships and social networks?

100

Community, systems, and societal acceptance and appreciation for people affected by mental health and substance use problems

What is Respect?

100

Recovery is built on the multiple capacities, strengths, talents, coping abilities, resources, and inherent value of each individual.

What are Many Pathways?

100

When individuals perceive that the envisioned advantages of change and adverse consequences of substance use outweigh the benefts of maintaining the status quo, the decisional balance tips in favor of change.

What is Preparation?

200

The recovery model depends on [fill in the blank]

What is lived experience?

200

Meaningful daily activities

What is Purpose?

200

Recovery emerges from this. The belief that recovery is real provides the essential and motivating message of a better future

What is Hope?

200

This in all of its diverse representations—including values, traditions, and beliefs—are keys in determining a person’s journey and unique pathway to recovery.

What is Culture?

200

This stage entails efforts to sustain gains made during the Action stage and to prevent recurrence

What is Maintenance?

300

They came up with the definition of recovery

Who is SAMHSA (Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration)?

300

Overcoming or managing one’s disease(s) or symptoms

What is Health?

300

Recovery involves individual, family, and community [fill in blank]

What are Strengths/Responsibility?



300

This encompasses an individual’s whole life, including mind, body, spirit, and community.

What is Holistic?

300

People who use substances are not considering change and do not intend to change in the foreseeable future.

What is Precontemplation?

400

A process of change through which individuals improve their health and wellness, live a self-directed life, and strive to reach their full potential

What is the definition of recovery?

400

A  stable and safe place to live

What is Home?


400

Individuals define their own life goals and design their unique path(s) towards those goals

What is Person-Driven?

400

An important factor in the recovery process is the presence and involvement of people who believe in the person’s ability to recover; who offer hope, support, and encouragement; and who also suggest strategies and resources for change.

What is the Relational Principle?

400

Here, individuals choose a strategy for change and begin to pursue it.


What is Action?

500

The process of recovery is [fill in the blank]

What is highly personal and occurs via many pathways?

500

Examples include: job, school, volunteerism, family caretaking, or creative endeavors, and the independence, income and resources to participate in society

What are meaningful daily activities?

500

Recovery is supported by [fill in blank]  The experience of this (such as physical or sexual abuse, domestic violence, war, disaster, and others) is often a precursor to or associated with alcohol and drug use, mental health problems, and related issues.

What is Addressing Trauma?

500

This provides a vital sense of belonging, supportive relationships, valued roles, and community.

What is Peer Support?

500

As these individuals become aware that a problem exists, they begin to perceive that there may be cause for concern and reasons to change.

What is Contemplation?

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