Aspire welcomes Dame Carol Black to Doncaster

We had the pleasure of hosting a visit from the Independent Adviser to the Government on Health, Wellbeing and Drugs earlier this month.

Dame Carol Black met representatives from Aspire Drug and Alcohol Service, the NHS, Doncaster Council and Public Health, to see the work being done to help people with substance dependence get the support they need to recover and turn their lives around.

As an independent Adviser to the UK Government, Dame Carol Black’s review, led to a new 10-year drug strategy From Harm to Hope. Published in December 2021 the strategy focused on ways to prevent the harm caused by drugs, to individuals, families and communities, the support available to ensure health and wellbeing through suitable treatment, and recovery programmes.

Dame Carol also visited New Beginnings in Balby, which is part of Aspire, and one of only eight NHS inpatient detox and rehabilitation treatment centres in the country. She also met and talked to social workers working in the service as well as some of the people who use the service about their experiences of the support available.

Dame Carol said: “I was delighted to meet so many highly experienced and dedicated representatives from organisations that have been helping drug dependent people in Yorkshire, Humberside and Lincolnshire for more than 30 years. There is a lot of determination to deliver for drug dependent people in and around Doncaster and we discussed the importance of implementing, at a local level, a whole-system approach to this widespread challenge.”

Stuart Green, Service Manager for Aspire, said: “It was a privilege to meet and show Dame Carol some of the amazing work we are doing in Doncaster. She has been a true inspiration advocating for reductions in the health inequalities and societal harms caused by substance misuse.”

Tim Young, Chief Executive of The Alcohol and Drug Service, said: “I was pleased to welcome Dame Carol Black to Doncaster services and to be able to show her that, while there is still a long way to go, the opportunity her report triggered is already making a difference at a local level.”

PHOTO: Dame Carol Black is pictured (seventh from the right); with Chair of Rotherham Doncaster and South Humber NHS Foundation Trust (RDaSH), Kathryn Lavery, (centre); RDaSH Interim Chief Executive Sheila Lloyd (fourth left); Tim Young, Alcohol and Drug Service Chief Executive (second right); and Stuart Green, Aspire Service Manager (third left); and colleagues from Aspire, RDaSH and partner organisations.
PHOTO: Dame Carol Black is pictured (seventh from the right); with Chair of Rotherham Doncaster and South Humber NHS Foundation Trust (RDaSH), Kathryn Lavery, (centre); RDaSH Interim Chief Executive Sheila Lloyd (fourth left); Tim Young, Alcohol and Drug Service Chief Executive (second right); and Stuart Green, Aspire Service Manager (third left); and colleagues from Aspire, RDaSH and partner organisations.