Aging In Recovery

Addiction Is Public. Recovery Is Invisible.

6 min · 24. touko 2026
jakson Addiction Is Public. Recovery Is Invisible. kansikuva

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Millions of Americans are living in long-term recovery. Not days. Not months. But decades. In this episode, Gilberto Cintron explores the growing population of older adults aging in long-term recovery — what he calls “The Invisible Cohort.” While addiction remains highly visible through arrests, overdoses, treatment systems, and media portrayals, recovery often becomes quiet, private, and forgotten. Yet millions of individuals who survived addiction decades ago are now entering older adulthood and confronting the realities of aging, chronic illness, trauma, isolation, and long-term care needs. This episode examines: • Why recovery becomes invisible • How addiction affects every level of society • The hidden population of professionals and public figures in recovery • Aging, trauma, and long-term recovery • Recovery-informed home care, assisted living, and nursing care • The development of the Aging in Recovery Residential Model (ARRM) • The mission of Never Alone Home Care Services, Inc. This conversation challenges traditional views of addiction and asks an urgent question: What happens when the recovery generation itself begins aging? https://nahcs.nyc [https://nahcs.nyc]

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Kaikki jaksot

24 jaksot

jakson ARRM Pillar Six: Research, Evaluation, and Evidence Development kansikuva

ARRM Pillar Six: Research, Evaluation, and Evidence Development

The Invisible Cohort: Why Nobody Studies Long-Term Recovery In this episode of Aging in Recovery, Gilberto Cintron, LMSW, discusses Pillar Six of the Aging in Recovery Residential Model (ARRM): Research, Evaluation, and Evidence Development. Why do public systems track addiction, overdose, incarceration, hospitalization, and treatment admissions—but rarely study what happens after decades of sustained recovery? This episode explores the research gap surrounding older adults in long-term recovery and argues that the Aging in Recovery population deserves serious study, serious evaluation, and serious systems design. Topics include evidence-based practice, implementation science, quality-of-life measurement, resident voice, university partnerships, and the possibility of Aging in Recovery emerging as a new field of study. Because invisibility is not only a social problem. It is also a research problem. And perhaps it is time to begin correcting it. Personally, I think "The Invisible Cohort: Why Nobody Studies Long-Term Recovery" is the strongest title you've created so far because it creates curiosity, highlights your core concept, and appeals to both recovery audiences and professionals. 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

Eilen5 min
jakson Pillar Seven Systems Integration, Policy, and Replication kansikuva

Pillar Seven Systems Integration, Policy, and Replication

The Invisible Cohort: Aging in Recovery and What Comes Next In this concluding episode of the Seven Pillars of the Aging in Recovery Residential Model (ARRM), Gilberto Cintron, LMSW, examines Systems Integration, Policy, and Replication. More than 23 million Americans identify as being in recovery. Many have maintained recovery for years and often decades. Many are now growing older. Yet the needs of older adults aging in recovery remain largely invisible within healthcare, long-term care, home care, recovery services, and public policy. This episode explores why Aging in Recovery is the predictable outcome of recovery success, why the Invisible Cohort deserves greater attention, and why new approaches to research, workforce development, housing, healthcare, and aging services may be needed. The conversation is no longer about whether people aging in recovery exist. The conversation is about what comes next. My favorite title for this one is: "The Invisible Cohort: Aging in Recovery and What Comes Next" because it captures your signature concept, creates curiosity, and positions the episode as both a conclusion and a beginning. 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

4. kesä 202610 min
jakson ARRM Pillar Five: Workforce Development and Cross-Disciplinary Training kansikuva

ARRM Pillar Five: Workforce Development and Cross-Disciplinary Training

People Change Lives. Are We Preparing Them In this episode, Gil Cintrón explores Pillar Five of the Aging in Recovery Residential Model (ARRM): Workforce Development and Cross-Disciplinary Training. As millions of Americans age after years and often decades of recovery, a new challenge emerges: preparing a workforce capable of understanding the intersection of aging, recovery, mental health, trauma, grief, chronic illness, and person-centered care. This discussion examines why workforce preparation is essential to the future of Aging in Recovery and why reducing fragmentation between systems must become part of the solution. Because people change lives. And people must be prepared before they can serve. 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

4. kesä 202611 min
jakson ARRM Pillar Four: Purpose, Contribution, and Recovery Capital kansikuva

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

3. kesä 202613 min
jakson Pillar Three Continuity of Recovery Support kansikuva

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

3. kesä 202610 min