Author: Kelly May
Planning Unit: Family and Consumer Sciences
Major Program: Recovering Your Finances
Outcome: Intermediate Outcome
Individuals in recovery are particularly susceptible to relapse during early stages of recovery. This increased risk is due, in part, to financial stress (e.g., debt, poor credit, limited employment opportunities) that people in recovery from SUD often encounter. The existing paradigm for treating addiction has proven woefully inadequate, as people with opioid addiction require an average of seven treatments to achieve sustained recovery and still exhibit relapse rates of about 40 to 60%. Prior to the development of Recovering Your Finances, the inclusion of financial education and soft skills development was often nonexistent (or only marginally included) in recovery efforts.
Recovering Your Finances (RYF) uses financial education training to expand the capacity of recovery centers and others who work with individuals in recovery, including Family and Consumer Sciences professionals, thereby reducing the likelihood of relapse at the microlevel while reinforcing macrolevel benefits. RYF is a comprehensive personal finance curriculum specifically designed for individuals in substance use disorder (SUD) recovery. This research-based curriculum was developed as an FCS Extension educational intervention to improve the financial capacity of individuals in recovery, thereby reducing factors that lead to relapse (e.g., financial stress).
The RYF curriculum includes 8 units covering topics including spending behaviors, budgeting, credit, credit history, establishing financial priorities, banking, earnings, and savings. Each unit includes a facilitator guide, a publication, activities to reinforce learning, an evaluation, and marketing tools. RYF is tailored to meet the unique needs of the intended audience. Additionally, because RYF is designed to be implemented in facilities where individuals in early recovery may gather (e.g., recovery centers, jails, community support centers), it can be taught using little technology, it does not require internet, it can conform to facility safety and security standards, and the implementation cost is low. The curriculum is available to professionals who complete our train-the-trainer program (both internal to Kentucky CES and external partners through MOU).
This eight-session workshop series was developed as part of a USDA Rural Community Development Incentive (RCDI) grant, with further expansion made possible by a SAMHSA Rural Opioid Technical Assistance (ROTA) grant. In September 2022, the team was awarded a Rural Health Safety Education (RHSE) grant through USDA-NIFA to combine and scale Addiction 101 and Recovering Your Finances to state and national audiences in through the web-based training, PROFIT (Promoting Recovery Online through Financial Instruction and addiction Training). PROFIT will partner with the Kentucky Office of Rural Health to train community healthcare professionals (in addition to Extension and other community-based educators) to deliver RYF. KORH will assist the PROFIT team with identifying eligible professionals from KY Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHC).
Initial training efforts, funded under the RCDI grant (2020), were focused on distributing the new curriculum via train-the-trainer workshops targeting four rural counties in Kentucky: Knox County, Leslie County, Bourbon County, and Boyd County. The training was for individuals in those counties who work with the substance use community, primarily treatment or recovery center staff, healthcare staff, and substance use treatment professionals (e.g., drug rehabilitation counselors, faith-community leaders, mental health professionals, medical healthcare providers), as well as FCS Extension agents. The Kentucky Board of Alcohol and Drug Counselors approved four hours of continuing education credits to these professionals trained.
Once the project was further expanded with funding from a SAMHSA-ROTA grant (2020-2021), the curriculum and train-the-trainer materials were provided to Family and Consumer Sciences Extension agents across Kentucky. A total of 112 professionals have been trained to date. With the expansion of the PROFIT funding, additional professional capacity trainings will be offered to deliver RYF beginning in 2023.
Program Results so far:
Participant Quotes:
The 2nd KEHA Leadership academy was held in March 1-3, 2023, with20 attendees from 18 different coun... Read More
Kentucky Saves is led by the University of Kentucky Cooperative Extension Service as part of the nat... Read More
The 2nd KEHA Leadership academy was held in March 1-3, 2023, with20 attendees from 18 different coun... Read More
Kentucky Saves is led by the University of Kentucky Cooperative Extension Service as part of the nat... Read More
Individuals in recovery are particularly susceptible to relapse during early stages of recovery. Thi... Read More
A Farm Transition Meeting was held because of discussion in the Taylor County Extension Council Meet... Read More