NJ Cops Oct18 | Page 49

2018 NJ State PBA Main Convention Proof of Positives Florida House Experience enhancing impact PBA is making in providing help for members battling addiction ■ BY MITCHELL KRUGEL Sitting at picnic tables outside the café at the Florida House Experience in Deer- field Beach, leaders of the NJ State PBA’s Peer Assistance Team discuss the power of positives transforming members who have come here to conquer their addic- tions. Between hits of espresso, Mau- ro Farallo, chair of the PBA Peer Liaison Committee, Director of Clinical Services Dr. Gene Stefanelli, Sherief Abu-Mous- tafa, CEO of Florida House and his team laud the dignity, hope, strength and con- fidence to overcome that this oasis of healing has facilitated for first respond- ers. Moe and Dr. Stef have taken the short excursion from the PBA Convention in Boca Raton to Florida House to check on some of the first responders currently in treatment and tour the facility that seems to add upgrades for patients every week. There is, of course, a stop to see the neu- rofeedback platform which identifies ar- eas of the brain that are dysregulated due to trauma, stress, anxiety and addiction, in order to treat the issues. This dynamic approach to treatment the American Society of Addiction Med- icine developed and that Florida House is at the forefront of providing is helping PBA members who have realized that they don’t – as Dr. Stef says – always need to wear the Superman outfit. The healing power of the approach has added to the positive feedback about what getting help can do and why more and more members are doing so. “It’s gotten to the point where we have services now and we have State Delegates and presidents who know what to do in a crisis situation,” Dr. Stefanelli states. “We have a state-of-the-art facility like Flori- da House. The total environment is very positive. Members come back and tell me, ‘Doc, that’s a great program. I don’t have the desires anymore.’ Cops don’t ever say that.” Farallo smiles when hearing such a statement. He knows what members are feeling, having conquered his own ad- diction 11 years ago. He knows that the greatest benefit at Florida House is its First Responders Program, in which they live together, do therapy together and support each other in an environment 48 NEW JERSEY COPS ■ OCTOBER 2018 A meeting with representatives of the NJ State PBA Peer Assistance Team at the Florida House Experi- ence during the convention in September included, from left, Jeff Weinstein, Florida House National Outreach Coordinator; Florida House CEO Sherief Abu-Moustafa; PBA Director of Clinical Services Dr. Gene Stefanelli; Craig Ewing, Florida House National Outreach Liaison; Anne Weymouth, director of the Florida House First Responder Program; and PBA Peer Liaison Committee Chair Mauro Farallo. separate from any non-first responder patients. “They have that bond, that officer bond, that brother-in-blue bond,” Moe declares. “It absolutely makes a differ- ence when you are going though some- thing like this because you feel like you are with somebody you can connect with. You are not alone.” Treatment and the environment are state of the art to meet the trepidation that had been preventing care for so long. And so is the support. Dr. Stef salutes how Florida House re- assures patients with the confidentiality that will prevent them from winding up on what he used to call the rubber gun squad. Additionally, Florida House ac- counts for all the paperwork to employ- ers and health insurance companies to ensure that first responder patients don’t have to worry about risking their jobs and funding their care. All of it leads to the most important as- set patients leave with, and the one that Sherief says lights him up every day. “Hope. We’re able to give them hope,” he proclaims. “What they’re dealing with is real, and we can really help them get back to their jobs, to their professions, to their families. We’re giving them hope that they can get better.” The positive feedback Dr. Stef and Moe have received on this visit comes from members who are about to complete their treatment at Florida House. They talk about the tools they have been giv- en to continue to battle their addictions and the post-care that has been set up. They have reveled over the seamless con- tinuum of care that began by being taken to the airport by a brother or sister, met in Florida by a first responder and going through treatment among other first re- sponders. When they go back, there will be no going back. “Their health is being restored, their jobs and families are being restored and their dignity is being restored,” asserts Craig Ewing, a former first responder who is the National Outreach Liaison for the Florida House First Responders Program. “They go back a better asset to their com- munities. They go back as stronger men.” 