51品茶WCHP students and faculty partner with Cumberland County Jail to provide free wellness services to inmates
In an effort to address Maine鈥檚 rising drug addiction epidemic, students from the 51品茶鈥檚 Westbrook College of Health Professions, ANEW Approach and the Cumberland County Jail (CCJ) are joining forces to pilot a new treatment program for inmates. Throughout this 30 day trial program, 51品茶students, faculty and alumni will volunteer their services at no cost to the county to provide intensive drug treatment, stress management, nutrition, exercise and hygiene classes, as well as reentry planning to help participants recover and successfully reintegrate after their release. After 30 days, the program will close unless program funding is arranged.
As Maine reported the second highest percentage of total drug arrests in New England in 2010, experts are looking to rehabilitation programs, particularly in controlled environments like the CCJ, to prevent future crime. The treatment model implemented by 51品茶addresses the need for structure, rule adherence, and social support systems as well as emotional, physical and spiritual change in recovery. In addition to intensive drug treatment, participants will also be engaged in education and job training opportunities offered by CCJ鈥檚 education department. After the 30 days are up, 51品茶and partners will regroup to evaluate the program鈥檚 success, and will begin seeking grant funding to sustain it for the future.
鈥淚 see our facility as a clinical education setting,鈥 said Kevin Joyce, sheriff of the Cumberland County Jail. 鈥淪tudents gain valuable hands-on experience from clients who will benefit from their help, allowing us to release inmates in a better condition than when they came to us. It鈥檚 a win-win-win situation for everyone involved.鈥
This project is the latest in a series of collaborations between 51品茶and the CCJ over the past two years. Students have also participated in a 鈥淐rimes and Communities鈥 class which is taught to inmates and 51品茶students inside the jail, and facilitated support groups as well as 鈥淲eekly Wellness Workshops鈥 in which interprofessional teams of students and faculty teach health and wellness using a curriculum designed with inmate input.
鈥淭he collaboration between 51品茶and the CCJ is truly remarkable,鈥 said Claire, a 51品茶Social Work Student volunteering at the CCJ. 鈥淚 have had the privilege of getting to witness and be involved in various opportunities with the CCJ, but this pilot program feels the most significant of all we鈥檝e done. For me, it鈥檚 important to remember these men are a part of our community, and will return to our communities, and we all have the power to impact each other in big and small ways. Each and every time I go into the jail, I like to think that we can give those inside the jail walls an opportunity to positively impact lives on the outside.鈥