Aging In Recovery

Why We Need Services Specifically For People Aging In Recovery

6 min · 25 mei 2026
aflevering Why We Need Services Specifically For People Aging In Recovery artwork

Beschrijving

Why would people aging in long-term recovery require recovery-aware home care, assisted living, or nursing services if traditional aging services already exist? In this episode, Gilberto Cintron explores an increasingly important question facing America’s aging recovery population. As millions of Americans with 20, 30, 40, and even 50 years in recovery enter older adulthood, society is beginning to confront a reality that has remained largely invisible for decades: People in long-term recovery are aging. While addiction remains highly visible through overdoses, arrests, homelessness, and public crises, recovery often becomes private and unseen as people quietly rebuild their lives, families, careers, and communities. But recovery is more than abstinence. For many individuals, recovery became a complete way of life built around: • Recovery meetings • Peer support • Sponsorship • Community connection • Recovery routines • Identity and purpose This episode explores why recovery-aware services may matter in: • Home care • Home attendant services • Assisted living • Nursing homes • Long-term care systems Topics include: • Aging in Recovery • The Invisible Cohort • Recovery-informed care • Trauma, grief, and isolation in aging • Cultural lag within healthcare and aging systems • The future of recovery-aware aging services • The Aging in Recovery Residential Model (ARRM) This conversation challenges traditional assumptions about addiction, aging, and recovery while asking an urgent public health and social care question: How do we help people not only age safely… but continue aging in recovery with dignity? https://nahcs.nyc [https://nahcs.nyc]

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Alle afleveringen

26 afleveringen

aflevering 56 Years in Recovery-Terry reflects on Aging, Mental Health, Retirement, and Life After Addiction artwork

56 Years in Recovery-Terry reflects on Aging, Mental Health, Retirement, and Life After Addiction

In this episode, I speak with Terry, a retired federal employee who has maintained her recovery for 56 years. Our conversation explores the often-overlooked experience of aging in recovery. We discuss how recovery changes over time, the challenges and opportunities that come with aging, the role of mental health and emotional wellness, the transition into retirement, and the importance of maintaining purpose, connection, and community. Terry also reflects on grief, loss, friendship, solitude versus loneliness, and what she believes healthcare providers, social workers, researchers, and policymakers need to understand about older adults living in long-term recovery. This is a conversation about recovery not as a destination, but as a lifelong journey lived through changing circumstances, new challenges, and continued personal growth. After 56 years of recovery, Terry's story offers wisdom, perspective, and hope for anyone interested in aging, recovery, and the future of recovery-informed care. Of all the titles, the one I would personally use is: 56 Years in Recovery: Terry on Aging, Mental Health, Retirement, and Life After Addiction because it immediately tells viewers this is not another "how I got clean" story—it's about what happens decades later, which is exactly the niche you're building with Aging in Recovery. Learn more: gilbertocintron.com aginginrecovery.com nahcs.nyc To support our work serving older adults aging in recovery, please visit: https://nahcs.nyc/donate

Gisteren37 min
aflevering Aging In Recovery: Recovery after a stroke artwork

Aging In Recovery: Recovery after a stroke

A week before his stroke, my friend and I were shopping for a new shearling coat. He was retired, physically active, a member of a bicycling club, and living independently. Like many people aging in long-term recovery, he had rebuilt his life, enjoyed a successful career with New York City, and was looking forward to the future. Then everything changed. In this deeply personal episode, I share the story of visiting a longtime friend in a rehabilitation facility after he suffered two strokes. It is a story about friendship, resilience, recovery, aging, fear, hope, and the reality that growing older comes for all of us—even those who have spent decades rebuilding their lives after addiction. This is not a story about active addiction. It is a story about what happens after recovery succeeds. It is a story about a man who did everything right, built a life, stayed clean, remained active, and now faces a different challenge: aging. Through his story, we explore why people aging in recovery may eventually need recovery-informed care, compassionate support systems, rehabilitation services, home care, assisted living, or other forms of support designed to preserve dignity, independence, and connection. Most importantly, it is a reminder that none of us walk this journey alone. Because recovery is not just about surviving addiction. It is about living long enough to grow old. And when old age arrives, who will walk beside us? If this episode resonates with you, please follow, share, and join the conversation about Aging in Recovery. Subscribe for Aging in Recovery videos: https://aginginrecovery.com/join-the-conversation/ Learn more about Aging in Recovery: https://aginginrecovery.com/ Learn more about Never Alone Home Care Services (NAHCS): https://nahcs.nyc Support the development of recovery-informed services for older adults: https://nahcs.nyc/donate

8 jun 202613 min
aflevering ARRM Pillar Six: Research, Evaluation, and Evidence Development artwork

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

5 jun 20265 min
aflevering Pillar Seven Systems Integration, Policy, and Replication artwork

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 jun 202610 min
aflevering ARRM Pillar Five: Workforce Development and Cross-Disciplinary Training artwork

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 jun 202611 min