DDN May 2017 DDN May 2017 | Page 13

Find the support you need at www.drinkanddrugsnews.com focused approaches to projects that complement the strategy’, which means the organisation is now on the lookout for funders with similar values. ‘It’s the whole gamut – people can support us by working in partnership, there’s different grants and trusts, there’s business and private sector organisations looking to deliver their social purpose. There are people out there who are looking for good, credible charities who they can see operate with integrity, and they want to support them. It becomes a virtuous circle because it gives you much more confidence in yourself as a charity. Charities don’t necessarily have the greatest PR, but that’s what we are, and what motivates us to get out of bed in the morning is doing our very best for the people who need our services.’ There will also be an emphasis on making the whole idea of treatment less intimidating – being more open and helping to reduce the fear of the unknown. Does the field do enough to demystify treatment, or is this another area where it may have fallen down in the past? ‘I think it’s difficult with the level of stigma and this increasing sense of deserving and undeserving in our local communities,’ she says. ‘But different organisations and groups have come together over the last few years to see what we can do about stigma, and maybe now’s the time when there’s a sense of need and coming together. I do sense a real increase in goodwill in the sector amongst providers, and maybe that c omes from difficult times.’ The strategy also addresses the thorny issue of well-meaning policies that can have unintended negative consequences, whether that’s benefit or commissioning decisions, or even treatment criteria. She cites the example of Grace House, the London- based service for women with complex needs opened by Phoenix in 2015. ‘Lots of people might have thought that was quite a strange thing to do – in the midst of so many residential services closing why would you open a new one, especially when it’s for some of the most marginalised and excluded women in our community? It was because there was a need – we were delivering lots of different services that sometimes just didn’t meet the needs of women with the most complex needs.’ This applies across the sector, she states. ‘Sometimes exclusions or criteria or the hoops that people are asked to jump through to demonstrate their motivation are absolute brick walls for the women we’re trying to help at Grace House. ‘What we’ve demonstrated is that if you open it up and you set out that you’re there to support the women everybody else thinks are too risky or tricky, or whatever they think – if you make sure you deliver services to meet their needs rather than what you might deliver elsewhere, you can get really good outcomes,’ she continues. ‘When you look at the devastation that has impacted those women’s lives – offending, domestic violence, sexual abuse, involvement in prostitution – those are the kinds of needs we’re there to support, and we have a 67 per cent completion rate. For any residential service – or any service – that’s really, really good.’ The ‘real heart of it’, she says, is that even though the commitment to support people with substance problems has been central to the sector for a long time ‘we’re still making it really difficult for some people to get the help that they want, when they need it’. While the strategy’s focus is inevitably on Phoenix as an organisation, she hopes it might eventually help to increase confidence in the rest of the field. ‘But if everyone involved in Phoenix can feel empowered to be able to speak with confidence about the importance of treatment, and the potential of recovery, then it will have done its job.’ www.phoenix- futures.org.uk STIGMA RECOVERY ‘While we’re seeing a reduction in stigma in mental health, what we’re seeing in addiction is almost a re-stigmatisation of our client group.’ Karen Biggs www.drinkanddrugsnews.com May 2017 | drinkanddrugsnews | 13