Recovery and Recovery Support (2024)

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Overview

SAMHSA'sworking definition of recoverydefines recovery as a process of change through which individuals improve their health and wellness, live self-directed lives, and strive to reach their full potential.Recovery signals a dramatic shift in the expectation for positive outcomes for individuals who experience mental and substance use conditions or the co-occurring of the two.

On March 1, 2022, President Biden announced his administration’sstrategy to address our nation’s mental health crisisas outlined in the 2022 Presidential Unity Agenda. To meet this goal, SAMHSA collaborated with federal, state, tribal, territorial, and local partners including peer specialists to develop theNational Model Standards for Peer Support Certification.

Person 1

Recovery and Recovery Support (1)

2 in 3 adults who ever had a mental health problem considered themselves to be recovering or in recovery.

Person 2

Recovery and Recovery Support (2)

7 in 10 adults who ever had a substance use problem considered themselves to be recovering or in recovery.

Guiding Principles

50.2 million American adults considered themselves to be in recovery from their substance use and/or mental health problems.

Guiding Principles

Hope, the belief that these challenges and conditions can be overcome, is the foundation of recovery. A person’s recovery is built on his or her strengths, talents, coping abilities, resources, and inherent values. It is holistic, addresses the whole person and their community, and is supported by peers, friends, and family members.

The process of recovery is highly personal and occurs via many pathways. It may include clinical treatment, medications, faith-based approaches, peer support, family support, self-care, and other approaches. Recovery is characterized by continual growth and improvement in one’s health and wellness and managing setbacks. Because setbacks are a natural part of life, resilience becomes a key component of recovery.

The Four Major Dimensions of Recovery

The Four Major Dimensions of Recovery

The Four Major Dimensions of Recovery

  1. Health-Overcoming or managing one’s disease(s) or symptoms - for example, abstaining from use of alcohol, illicit drugs, and non-prescribed medication if one has an addiction problem- and for everyone in recovery making informed, healthy choices that support physical and emotional well-being
  2. Home-Having a stable and safe place to live
  3. Purpose -Conducting meaningful daily activities, such as a job, school volunteerism, family caretaking, or creative endeavors, and the independence, income, and resources to participate in society
  4. Community- Having relationships and social networks that provide support, friendship, love, and hope

Recovery and Recovery Support (3)

Recovery Newsroom

Get the latest announcements on SAMHSA’s effort to address recovery support. Access the latest news, upcoming events, and more.

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Recovery and Recovery Support (4)

Recovery Funding

  • National Recovery Month
  • Best Practices for Recovery Housing
  • Recovery Summit Executive Summary (PDF | 351 KB)
  • SAMHSA Inclusion Policy (PDF | 195 KB)
  • Allowable Recovery Support Services RSS Expenditures through the SUBG and the MHBG (PDF | 464 KB)
  • Recovery from Substance Use and Mental Health Problems Among Adults in the United States (PDF | 439 KB)
  • Building New Horizons: Opening Career Pathways for Peers with Criminal Justice Backgrounds - SMI Adviser
  • Consumer Operated Services Program EBP Toolkit
  • Other Recovery Publications
  • Region 3 Community Meeting (PDF | 733 KB)
  • Region 5 Community Meeting (PDF | 1.3 MB)
  • Peers and Psychiatry in Dialogue - Meeting Summary (PDF | 461 KB)
  • Peer Possibilities: National Peer Workforce Summit - Executive Summary and Meeting Report (PDF | 640 KB)
  • Peer-Operated Warm Lines Technical Experts Panel - Executive Summary and Meeting Report (PDF | 471 KB)
  • Lifting Lived Experience Across Criminal Justice Settings - Executive Summary and Report (PDF | 665 KB)

Last Updated

Last Updated: 03/26/2024

Last Updated

Recovery and Recovery Support (2024)
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