Join us for this exciting 2-day event!

The Advancing Connections for Recovery conference is intended to facilitate multifaceted conversations about recovery supports. The goal of this conference is to bring together a variety of stakeholders to foster relationships that empower us to serve and support people with substance use disorders, eating disorders, and other mental or behavioral health conditions.  

 

 

staff posing together at Advancing Connections for Recovery event

 

Day 1: Riley’s Wish

woman delivering lecture at Advancing Connections for Recovery event

Riley's Wish Foundation seeks to encourage purposeful actions to serve those battling obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD).  Our goal is to foster unity among persons suffering from OCD, and to educate the public about the disorder while affecting change in OCD awareness and treatment.  One particular focus of the Foundation is to help people with co-occurring disorders of OCD and substance use disorder.

In light of this mission, the Riley’s Wish Foundation has partnered with the ²ÝÁñÊÓƵ State University Center for Young Adult Addiction and Recovery (CYAAR) to offer an annual lecture series that explores the nuance and considerations of co-occurring disorders. For the 6th year of this collaboration, the Riley’s Wish Lecture Series will kick off the Advancing Connections for Recovery Conference. Day 1 of the conference will focus on co-occurring disorders from a variety of perspectives and will include discussion of disorders that frequently co-present, as well as a panel that will explore where the treatment of certain co-occurring disorders is similar and where it differs. 

Day 2: The Recovery Ecosystem

conference attendees having conversation at table

Day 2 of Advancing Connections for Recovery will focus on the recovery ecosystem. Mental and behavioral health disorders are complex, multifaceted concerns that require a variety of holistic supports. The recovery ecosystem refers to the wide range of supports that can provide wrap-around care. This includes formal and informal supports, such as clinical services, treatment options, recovery residences, recovery community organizations, collegiate recovery programs, family, social groups, and a variety of other support systems.