Aging In Recovery

Aging in Recovery and the Invisible Cohort

6 min · 22. Mai 2026
Episode Aging in Recovery and the Invisible Cohort Cover

Beschreibung

In this episode, we explore the emerging concept of Aging in Recovery and the growing population of older adults living in long-term recovery who have largely remained invisible within both addiction systems and traditional aging services. This discussion examines how millions of Americans survived addiction, rebuilt their lives, raised families, established careers, and maintained recovery for decades — yet now face the realities of aging with little recognition or recovery-informed support. Topics include: • The hidden population of older adults in long-term recovery • Why recovery often becomes “invisible” once people stabilize • Trauma, grief, PTSD, incarceration, and aging • The limitations of traditional treatment and aging models • Recovery-informed home care and support services • NAHCS and the Aging in Recovery Residential Model (ARRM) • The importance of peer support, dignity, and community in later life • Why long-term recovery is far more than abstinence This episode argues that recovery is not simply the absence of substances. Recovery is a lifelong process of rebuilding identity, relationships, purpose, emotional stability, and community across decades. And as America itself continues aging, society must begin preparing for the growing number of people aging in long-term recovery. Because the generation that survived addiction and helped build recovery communities should not grow old forgotten… or invisible

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Alle Folgen

21 Folgen

Episode ARRM Pillar Four: Purpose, Contribution, and Recovery Capital Cover

ARRM Pillar Four: Purpose, Contribution, and Recovery Capital

What gives life meaning after survival is no longer the primary goal? In this episode, Gil Cintrón explores Pillar Four of the Aging in Recovery Residential Model (ARRM): Purpose, Contribution, and Recovery Capital. This discussion examines why older adults in long-term recovery possess valuable life experience, resilience, wisdom, and recovery capital developed over decades, and why aging systems must look beyond decline and focus on dignity, meaning, purpose, and continued contribution. * Because people need more than care. * People need reasons to get up in the morning. * People need opportunities to remain connected, relevant, and engaged. The goal is not survival, the goal is meaning. Visit our website and, if you' can, please consider making a tax-deductible donation to support Aging in Recovery research, education, and advocacy. https://nahcs.nyc/donate

Gestern13 min
Episode Pillar Three Continuity of Recovery Support Cover

Pillar Three Continuity of Recovery Support

What happens when a person with 20, 30, 40, or even 50 years of recovery begins facing the realities of aging? In this episode, Gil Cintrón explores Pillar Three of the Aging in Recovery Residential Model (ARRM): Continuity of Recovery Support. As people age, transportation challenges, mobility limitations, health issues, social isolation, and the loss of recovery peers can make it increasingly difficult to access the relationships, routines, and supports that helped sustain recovery for decades. This conversation examines recovery as a lifelong process, the importance of recovery capital, and why continuity of support must become part of the Aging in Recovery discussion. Recovery does not end when aging begins. This title is stronger than simply "Pillar 3" because it makes someone stop and think before clicking. That's exactly what you want on both YouTube and Spotify. Visit our website and, if you' can, please consider making a tax-deductible donation to support Aging in Recovery research, education, and advocacy. https://nahcs.nyc/donate

Gestern10 min
Episode ARRM Pillar Two- Centered Aging Care for Older Adults in Recovery Cover

ARRM Pillar Two- Centered Aging Care for Older Adults in Recovery

In this episode, Gil Cintron, LMSW, explores Pillar Two of the Aging in Recovery Residential Model (ARRM): Person-Centered Aging Care. Recovery does not disappear when a person enters assisted living or nursing-home care. Older adults in recovery remain individuals with unique histories, identities, strengths, losses, relationships, and recovery journeys. This discussion examines why dignity, self-determination, recovery identity, grief, purpose, and quality of life must remain central to care planning for older adults with significant clean time. Drawing upon nursing-home resident rights, person-centered care principles, and the emerging field of Aging in Recovery, this episode argues that the person must never disappear inside the institution. Because people aging in recovery deserve more than safety. They deserve dignity. They deserve choice. They deserve continuity. And they deserve to be known. VISIT OUR SITE AND GIVE IS YOU CAN https://nahcs.nyc/donate

Gestern11 min
Episode ARRM Pillar One: Recovery-Informed Culture and the Future of Aging Care Cover

ARRM Pillar One: Recovery-Informed Culture and the Future of Aging Care

In this episode of Aging in Recovery, LMSW Gilberto Cintron begins a deep exploration of the seven pillars of the Aging in Recovery Residential Model (ARRM). Pillar One focuses on Recovery-Informed Culture — the foundational idea that older adults living in long-term recovery deserve aging environments grounded in dignity, trauma awareness, respect, person-centered care, and human connection. This episode examines why traditional long-term care settings may be unprepared for the recovery generation and why recovery-informed culture must extend beyond clinicians to include all staff within aging-care systems. Topics include: • Trauma-informed care • Recovery identity in later life • Institutional culture and dignity • Social work ethics • Recovery-oriented systems of care • Aging, stigma, and long-term recovery • Why language matters in elder care • The emotional role of meetings, sponsors, and recovery routines This episode is part of the continuing ARRM series exploring the future of recovery-informed aging care in America.

1. Juni 202611 min
Episode ARRM: A New Model for People Aging in Long-Term Recovery Cover

ARRM: A New Model for People Aging in Long-Term Recovery

n this episode of the Aging in Recovery podcast, Gilberto Cintron, LMSW, introduces the Aging in Recovery Residential Model (ARRM) — a proposed framework for older adults in long-term recovery who can no longer safely live independently but still require recovery-informed support, dignity, purpose, and community. This episode explores: The “Invisible Cohort” of older adults in long-term recovery The gap between aging services and recovery support systems Recovery-informed home care and residential care Recovery capital and identity in later life Assisted living and nursing home adaptation Workforce development and interdisciplinary training Why recovery does not end with aging ARRM is presented not as a treatment program, but as a serious proposed model of care rooted in social work, gerontology, person-centered care, and recovery-informed practice. This episode asks a central question: What do we owe to the people who survived addiction, sustained recovery for decades, and are now growing old? Join the conversation. visit https://nahcs.nyc

31. Mai 202624 min