National Recovery Month 2024

National Recovery Month 2024

What is National Recovery Month? 

Why Do We Need National Recovery Month?

  1. Recovery is Becoming Prevalent: In 2021, 70 million adults in the U.S. reported having had a substance use or mental health problem at some point, and 72.1% of them (about 50.2 million) considered themselves to be in recovery.
  2. Substance Use Recovery: Of the 29 million adults who perceived they had a substance use problem, 72.2% (or 20.9 million) considered themselves to be in recovery or to have recovered.
  3. Mental Health Recovery: Among the 58.7 million adults who believed they had a mental health problem, 66.5% (or 38.8 million) considered themselves to be in recovery or to have recovered.
  4. Impact of COVID-19 on Recovery: Adults who reported that COVID-19 negatively impacted their mental health or substance use were less likely to be in recovery. Those who believed the pandemic worsened their substance use or mental health saw a decrease in their recovery success.
  5. Access to Treatment Affects Recovery: Adults who received treatment for substance use or mental health issues in the past year were significantly more likely to report being in recovery compared to those who did not receive treatment.

The Dangerous Rise of Opioids

The rise of opioid use disorder, particularly driven by the increased prevalence of fentanyl, has created a public health crisis of staggering proportions.

More About National Recovery Month

National Recovery Month was established as an annual observance in 1989 by SAMHSA under President George H.W. Bush. The goals, as stated, were to raise awareness about mental health and substance use treatment and celebrate everyone on a recovery journey.

SAMHSA’s Four Dimensions of Recovery

SAMHSA focuses on four major dimensions of recovery: health, home, purpose, and community. All of these are factors that we need to live healthy, happy lives and reach our full potential.

White House Proclamation by President Biden

During National Recovery Month, we at addictionhelp.com are focused on celebrating the wins for those in recovery and encouraging people to take that step and find recovery in their own lives.

Have You Heard of National Addiction Professionals Day?