Rural Monitor Search Results for: substance abuse
29 Rural Monitor webpages matched your search. Here are matches 11 - 20:
Date: Jan 22, 2020
National research has revealed it and rural research suggests it: over 40% of today's physicians are burned out. This in-depth story reviews information about burnout in healthcare professions and for physicians in particular. Along with reviewing causes and impact, a medical school wellness-advocate, a researcher, and a large healthcare organization with a rural footprint shared interventions and solutions. - The Rural Monitor
...abusing substances. Now, she said, the program has matured where prevention is a focus for their...
Date: Jul 13, 2022
Rural mortality rates had been improving until recent years when a perfect storm of the opioid epidemic and COVID-19 pandemic converged to reverse these gains. However, federally funded efforts have sought to stem the tide through community, clinical, and policy efforts. - The Rural Monitor
...Abuse (NIDA), in collaboration with the CDC, the Appalachian Regional Commission (ARC), and the Substance...
Date: Feb 12, 2014
Pathways Vermont is helping those who were previously chronically homeless achieve health and well-being. - The Rural Monitor
...substance or alcohol addictions and/or learn to cope with past abuse while they are experiencing...
Date: May 18, 2016
Opioid addiction continues to devastate communities across the country. However, there are some aspects of rural living that leave small communities even more vulnerable to the ever-growing epidemic. - The Rural Monitor
...substance abuse (no longer available online), and people diagnosed with mood or anxiety disorders are about...
Date: Nov 16, 2016
In Pennsylvania, more people are dying from drug overdose than from car accidents. The FORHP-funded Addiction Recovery Mobile Outreach Team (ARMOT) program works to educate medical staff on addiction and recovery and to support patients as they navigate the recovery process. - The Rural Monitor
...substance use disorders. The Addiction Recovery Mobile Outreach Team (ARMOT) program is a collaboration of three hospitals, two substance abuse...
Date: Aug 26, 2020
In addition to information from federal agencies, a Missouri cardiologist reviews the science behind what often seems to be mixed messages concerning alcohol use and its impact on health and well-being - The Rural Monitor
...Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) defines heavy drinking as 8 or more...
Date: Sep 5, 2018
As more federal dollars are directed toward the opioid crisis, three communities use grant funds for treatment and recovery care coordination in court, prisons, and the homes of new moms. - The Rural Monitor
...Substance Abuse Toolkit – Offers evidence-based examples, promising models, program best practices, and resources for implementation...
Date: Jul 26, 2023
In response to rising rates of overdose death and injection-related disease, rural organizers across the country are testing innovative harm reduction strategies to expand potentially life-saving services to some of the most marginalized members of their communities. - The Rural Monitor
...substance abuse. When Dr. Spencer encounters this line of thinking in her own small town...
Date: Sep 21, 2022
As vice president for research, innovation, and evaluation at Texas-based Episcopal Health Foundation, Shao-Chee Sim, PhD, discusses how philanthropic organizations can make small rural research investments — and, in particular, leverage cross-funder collaboration — that impact not only funders themselves, but also healthcare delivery systems and the rural Americans they serve. - The Rural Monitor
...substance abuse and mental health block grants on state and local government spending. In the aftermath...
Date: Jun 24, 2015
The Rural Health Philanthropy Partnership, a collaboration between rural federal programs and rural-focused trusts and foundations, promotes access to quality healthcare and health equity in rural areas. - The Rural Monitor
...Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration] and having them plan with us, and not for us, is so important...