A lot to be grateful for this Thanksgiving. Thank you for being part of our journey and for trusting us to be part of yours.
Commonly Well
数据基础架构与分析
Potsdam,NY 492 位关注者
We are arming changemakers with recovery intelligence to remake lives.
关于我们
We utilize technology and develop tools that measure wellbeing that power a design process for new systems, communities, organizations and experiences.
- 网站
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https://www.commonlywell.com
Commonly Well的外部链接
- 所属行业
- 数据基础架构与分析
- 规模
- 2-10 人
- 总部
- Potsdam,NY
- 类型
- 私人持股
- 创立
- 2020
产品
Recovery Capital Index?
调查软件
The Recovery Capital Index? (RCI) provides a comprehensive picture of a person’s whole wellbeing using an online, automated survey. The RCI is person-centered and scientifically validated to reliably measure addiction wellness regardless of treatment modality, recovery pathway, or substance of use. Addiction recovery is not a binary state — let’s not measure it that way.
地点
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主要
US,NY,Potsdam
Commonly Well员工
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Johanna M. Dolan
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Justin Smith, Ph.D.
CTO | Award-winning Executive | Research and Advanced Analytics | Talent Acquisition | Relationship Management | Machine Learning | Neuroscience Ph.D.
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David Whitesock
Social entrepreneur turning data into intelligence for behavioral health, recovery support, and communities | Founder at Commonly Well | Architect of…
动态
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Building a strong research and applied research base with the Recovery Capital Index with great partners in south Florida. #recoverycapital
Social entrepreneur turning data into intelligence for behavioral health, recovery support, and communities | Founder at Commonly Well | Architect of the Recovery Capital Index
Some promising research out of Palm Beach County by Heather Howard, PhD, LICSW and her team. We are steadily learning what aspects of recovery capital promote certain outcomes, such as housing stability and recidivism. From Dr. Howard's article at ATTC: "The study tracked participants' progress through surveys using the?Recovery Capital Index (RCI). This tool measures improvements in social and personal well-being over time. Participants received support from peer navigators (individuals with lived/living experience), care coordinators, and housing specialists. The program also provided financial help for rent and other necessities, reducing immediate stress and barriers to recovery. "Participants were recruited from multiple sources, including jails and community reentry programs. Data collection spanned 90 days, with follow-ups at 30-day intervals to monitor personal capital, housing stability, and rearrest rates." Findings: ?? Housing Stability:?76% of participants secured stable housing. Access to family support, healthcare, and a sense of purpose were key predictors of housing stability. ??♀ Recidivism:?Only 14% of participants were rearrested during the 90-day period. Those with better social capital (such as feelings of safety and community support) were less likely to be rearrested. ?? Personal Capital:?Participants who experienced improvements in social capital also showed significant gains in personal well-being. Peer support was particularly effective in helping individuals stay engaged with the program. Link to full article in comments. Commonly Well John Hulick #recoverycapital #socialcapital
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Social entrepreneur turning data into intelligence for behavioral health, recovery support, and communities | Founder at Commonly Well | Architect of the Recovery Capital Index
I am fortunate to call Johanna M. Dolan a colleague, partner, and friend. Johanna's wisdom is a comfort to me and to everyone she serves. This conversation with Whitney Menarcheck is a window into what it means to be principled and resilient and driven for collective impact. #resilience #recoverycapital https://lnkd.in/g5EaqzTP
The Power of Principle Living
https://www.youtube.com/
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Social entrepreneur turning data into intelligence for behavioral health, recovery support, and communities | Founder at Commonly Well | Architect of the Recovery Capital Index
Recovery Capital in the real world ... Commonly Well is taking Election Day off! ???? Engaging in the democratic process and our civic duty is a form of recovery capital. We express our beliefs and purpose and values in how we vote or just being able to vote. This sense of belonging is core to our Cultural Capital. Every election is important. This one carries more weight than most. Vote! #recoverycapital #vote
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Social entrepreneur turning data into intelligence for behavioral health, recovery support, and communities | Founder at Commonly Well | Architect of the Recovery Capital Index
A question we get asked a lot is: are there other effects or benefits of using the Recovery Capital Index on the participant, or is it just meant to give input to the provider? The RCI is a self-assessment or a participant reported outcomes measure. It is a tool with many functions. One of the functions as a "self" assessment is to allow an individual to take an inventory of their life. When they are rigorously engaged in that inventory, the effect is an opening of awareness to internal and external factors that implicate their recovery or well-being. Another impact is that the assessment is a mode of communication between the care provider and participant. Every response tells the provider something about the individual, which can guide support, present decisions, etc. The science behind self-assessments as effective tools in improving health outcomes is typically done in primary care settings around chronic diseases. The article linked below shows that "[p]ositive outcomes for effective SMS (self-management support) included improvements in clinical indicators, health-related quality of life, self-efficacy (confidence to self-manage), disease knowledge or control." The RCI and other self-assessments are multi-dimensional tools that do more that passively measure an outcome -- they can actually influence the outcome you seek. #recoverycapital #selfevaluation #behavioralhealth Commonly Well
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Great insight from our CEO David Whitesock on the “chicken and egg” problem of recovery capital.
Social entrepreneur turning data into intelligence for behavioral health, recovery support, and communities | Founder at Commonly Well | Architect of the Recovery Capital Index
Recovery capital in the real world: the chicken and the egg problem. When we usually think about the concept of #recoverycapital we usually consider it as a means to an end — moving a person from an addicted state to a recovery/recovered state. But if we only think about recovery capital that way and the only research conducted follows that path, then we end up with an asset class with limited impact. My involvement in a local government conference got me thinking about the element of civic engagement and how that asset reveals itself in a recovery capital framework. The very few articles that look at civic engagement (see link in comments) consider it as a result of being “in recovery” and then capital for maintaining recovery (i.e., abstinence). But what if we looked at civic activity and access to civic opportunity as a means to curbing addiction in the first place? Is that still “recovery capital”? Most would say “no” but I argue that this is a more robust asset class of resilience capital and an approach that could save far more lives and treasure in the long run.
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Social entrepreneur turning data into intelligence for behavioral health, recovery support, and communities | Founder at Commonly Well | Architect of the Recovery Capital Index
Really enjoyed being part of this fantastic series from the The Change Companies. You can follow the link to the comments to see my answers to the question below and many others posed by Valerie Bagley, MAPP and Scott Boyles. Q:?Why is it important to measure Recovery Capital? And how early should we be thinking about measuring it? David?Whitesock:?So measuring [Recovery Capital] gets back to that sort of long-standing success measure around drug and alcohol addiction or substance use disorder. And that is sober/not sober. And for a lot of people, that end-all, be-all kind of determinant of having to self-select sobriety or not using drugs again for the rest of my life is a really hard decision. It's a really hard goal to reach. And so you have people that kind of cycle through that process. And it is part of the process. However, psychologically, having to have day one happen to me over and over and over again sort of destroys what other progress might be happening around me. So I might have just gotten a job. I might have gotten my kids back. I might have gotten out of jail. I might have rekindled some relationships. I might have started to find a path towards the place in life that I want. Society and even the treatment system for a long time said, "Nope, you return to use. That relapse hits reset and you’ve got to start over. All the other good stuff be damned." And so Recovery Capital says, "No, no, no. Let's look at the rest of what's happening in your life. Let's bring all that to bear. We can quantify it." #asam #recoverycapital #outcomesmeasurement American Society of Addiction Medicine - ASAM Commonly Well
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Who Owns the Data? ?? This is a question we get asked a lot -- for good reason. Our answer lies in our data principles and our values. We believe that the ultimate owner of the data is the participant. It is their sensitive and personal information being shared to the provider and retained by our technology. It is THEIR data. If they want it deleted or they don't want to share something, our job is to meet that demand. Our provider customers get access to and can retain the data within their policies, protocols, and within all regulations and laws. Commonly Well serves as a steward of the data. We protect it and maintain it. We never sell the data. We use the data to improve the tools to improve people's lives. And we use the data to understand what works and what doesn't. The data is not ours. It belongs to people who are usually going through the most challenging and horrific time of their lives. The right data, used at the right time, with the right people, can influence better care and spark unpredictable transformations! #data #dataprivacy #behavioralhealth #recoveryintelligence
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Social entrepreneur turning data into intelligence for behavioral health, recovery support, and communities | Founder at Commonly Well | Architect of the Recovery Capital Index
City infrastructure — especially sidewalks — are a key component of building and growing recovery capital and social determinants of health. Great job Denver! Small individual commitment across the community for a long period of time is the equation for this to be successful. There is also a “if you build it, they will come” aspect to this. When the sidewalks are passable and well-maintained, people will get out and use them. Sidewalks are closer to businesses, which mean people are more likely to walk in and spend money. They are closer to homes, which means people can see and recognize each other, reducing separation and increasing connection. Alexandra Jacobs Wilke John Hulick Lorez Meinhold #recoverycapital #sdoh https://lnkd.in/gMMJadQx
Denver is funding sidewalk maintenance with a property owner tax - Marketplace
https://www.marketplace.org
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The Commonly Well team spent the week in Palm Beach County to connect with each other and support our partnership with the County. Each year the community comes together to review and celebrate the progress of the recovery oriented system of care. The impressive leadership of John Hulick and many others has resulted impactful collaboration. It was announced that Palm Beach County’s overdose deaths dropped 40% from the previous year!!! But as John reminded everyone … the work is far from over. Also launched at the Resilience and Recovery Conference was the County’s Resilience Survey. Underlying this survey is the RCI . Commonly Well is eager to see the data come in and provide the final analysis and report next year. Great work team: Johanna M. Dolan Justin Smith, Ph.D. Jennifer McCann, PMP Ariel "Air" Britt, MSW David Whitesock #recoverycapital #resillience #recoveryintelligence
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