Ex-military personnel who are recovering from addictions are more likely to succeed in recovery through veteran specific services, new research has revealed. The research, carried out by Sheffield Hallam University’s Helena Kennedy Centre for International Justice on behalf of charities Addaction and Forces in Mind Trust (FiMT), looked at the work of the Right Turn project, which has been developed to support veterans who are recovering from addiction and helping them reintegrate in to civilian life. Addaction's Right Turn initiative, the first of its kind in the UK when launched, is a pioneering project operating on the premise that the comradeship underpinning military life can be re-directed to support recovery from addictions and desist...
Scotland has one of the highest rates of substance use disorders in the UK and Europe. To address th...
Purpose/Objective: The objective of this cross-sectional study was to assess how psychosocial variab...
This study provides a platform for exploring addiction issues and investigates how extended treatmen...
Ex-military personnel who are recovering from addictions are more likely to succeed in recovery thro...
The Right Turn project works with the ex-service personnel community in recovery from substance misu...
This project arose from two frequently stated perceptions of clinical practitioners working within t...
This report contains some of the first insights into how recovery has transformed the lives of many ...
Substance misuse is a key public health priority within the UK. Recent policy recommendations have h...
While only a minority of veterans experience transitional difficulties after military service, there...
Moral injury can significantly negatively impact mental health, but currently no validated treatment...
This report marks a milestone in the RSA’s Whole Person Recovery programme with the final phase of i...
Research report presenting findings from the first UK research focusing on the experiences of vetera...
Contemporary recovery-models of treatment for substance misuse prioritise community-based support sy...
Background: Experiencing potentially morally injurious events (PMIEs) has been found to be significa...
Although there has been a growth in recent years in recovery research, much of this has been from th...
Scotland has one of the highest rates of substance use disorders in the UK and Europe. To address th...
Purpose/Objective: The objective of this cross-sectional study was to assess how psychosocial variab...
This study provides a platform for exploring addiction issues and investigates how extended treatmen...
Ex-military personnel who are recovering from addictions are more likely to succeed in recovery thro...
The Right Turn project works with the ex-service personnel community in recovery from substance misu...
This project arose from two frequently stated perceptions of clinical practitioners working within t...
This report contains some of the first insights into how recovery has transformed the lives of many ...
Substance misuse is a key public health priority within the UK. Recent policy recommendations have h...
While only a minority of veterans experience transitional difficulties after military service, there...
Moral injury can significantly negatively impact mental health, but currently no validated treatment...
This report marks a milestone in the RSA’s Whole Person Recovery programme with the final phase of i...
Research report presenting findings from the first UK research focusing on the experiences of vetera...
Contemporary recovery-models of treatment for substance misuse prioritise community-based support sy...
Background: Experiencing potentially morally injurious events (PMIEs) has been found to be significa...
Although there has been a growth in recent years in recovery research, much of this has been from th...
Scotland has one of the highest rates of substance use disorders in the UK and Europe. To address th...
Purpose/Objective: The objective of this cross-sectional study was to assess how psychosocial variab...
This study provides a platform for exploring addiction issues and investigates how extended treatmen...