Amy’s Place in east London will help women reintegrate into society after
quitting alcohol or drugs
Amy
Winehouse performing at Glastonbury in 2008. The singer died from alcohol
poisoning in 2011. Photograph: Danny Martindale/WireImage
The Amy Winehouse Foundation
has partnered with a housing provider to open a home for women recovering from
alcohol and drug addiction, on the fifth anniversary of the singer’s death.
Known as
Amy’s Place, the recovery house, which will be in operation from Monday, is
based in east London and
aims to help recovering female addicts reintegrate into society and sustain
their recovery. It will be made up of 12 self-contained apartments, four of
which are two-bed, and can house up to 16 women.
Dominic
Ruffy, the special project director at the Amy Winehouse Foundation, said it
decided to set up Amy’s Place because of the general lack of women-specific
services for addiction treatment in the UK, despite research showing that women
have a far greater chance of relapse without such support.
“There are
about six women-only rehabs, and beyond that, there’s an even greater paucity
of women-specific recovery housing beds,” he said. “There is only one other
women-only recovery house in London and it’s only a four-bed with a six-month
waiting list.”
Ruffy, who
has been in recovery himself, said while traditional rehab was usually made up
of detoxification and intensive psychological treatment, a recovery house was a
safe place for people to come out of treatment and be reintegrated into
society, with support workers to help guide them.
“Picture a
person who is 14 years old, has come from a broken home, hasn’t engaged at
school, ends on a path of addiction and winds up at 25-26 years old going to
rehab, learning how to get clean, and then leaving rehab and being told to get
on with it. It can be as simple as not knowing how to go about getting your
benefits or engaging in college.
“Our
experience shows if you give people an extended period of time post-traditional
rehabilitation treatment, you will improve the percentage of people who stay
clean [in the] long term. We have a saying in recovery that the drink and drugs
aren’t our problem, it’s living life clean and sober.”
Residents
at Amy’s Place will be supported using a “co-production model”, which gives
them shared control over the services that aid their recovery. To come up with
the programme, the foundation consulted several women at the women-only rehab
centre Hope House in south London, who described what their perfect recovery house would look like in terms
of activities, workshops, personal development pathways and length of stay.
Together, they created a three-month programme for new residents of Amy’s
Place, which includes holistic activities such as yoga, relapse prevention
groups, and potential skills and employability based workshops.
Laura, 35,
a former heroin addict and mother of three, is planning to move to the east
London centre after an upcoming stint in rehab. She told the Guardian: “I think
it’s really important to have a place like this when you’re in recovery. It’s a
new experience to come off drugs. Some people suffer from anxiety, some people
suffer from other stuff, and it’s reassuring to have some support and help with
finding a home and getting a job, getting back into normal routine life, which
you didn’t have before as a drug addict. You have to learn it all as new.”
Laura said
an all-women’s home would give her time to concentrate on herself, adding:
“There are no men around, no distractions to help you run away.
“My aim is
to be drug-free and to get back into life, and deal with my underlying issues
that made me want to use drugs in the first place. I really want to leave this
chapter of my life behind and start a new future with my kids and
husband-to-be.”
Ruffy said
it was important to have women-only recovery houses because “women tend to come
into recovery with a host of complex issues, whether that’s physical, mental or
psychological abuse”.
He said the
foundation’s consultation with women in rehab showed that they all preferred a
women-only house because “they wanted to ensure they were either safe and away
from ex-partners, or safe from their issues around co-dependency, around men …
It was evident there was a clear need and the women would feel more secure in
an environment [where] they knew they weren’t going to be troubled by aspects
from their past.”
Amy
Winehouse died aged 27 in July 2011 from accidental alcohol poisoning. The foundation was set up by her family following the singer’s death, and
works to prevent young people misusing alcohol and drugs, as well as to support
disadvantaged young people to help them fulfil their potential. It has set up
Amy’s Place with the help of Centra Care and Support, part of not-for-profit organisation Circle Housing, one of the UK’s
largest providers of affordable housing.
Michelle
Davies, the London regional director of Centra Care and Support, said: “We want
to empower young women to remain in control of their recovery by providing safe
and secure homes, personalised services and a vibrant community that will build
on their strengths, experiences and preferences.”
Jane
Winehouse of the Amy Winehouse Foundation said: “This project will make such a
profound difference to so many young women, enabling them to have a safe
environment in which to rebuild their lives and put into practice all the
learning they have acquired through their treatment journey. Fresh starts are
difficult to make, full of challenges, but at Amy’s Place, we will give young
women the tools and support to help make this a reality.”
https://www.theguardian.com/society/2016/aug/01/amy-winehouse-charity-home-female-recovering-addicts
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