Yorkshire Post

CHARITY FINDS ITSELF BUSIER THAN USUAL DURING PANDEMIC

The work of Project 6 charity includes supporting people affected by alcohol and drug use and it has been far busier than usual during the pandemic. Laura Reid reports.

- Email: laura. reid@ jpimedia. co. uk Twitter: @ YP_ LauraR

I’m so grateful for the services and support I’ve had. I don’t know where I would have been without them. If I can help somebody else that’s enough for me and worth not having a drink for. Ruth Brown has been helped by the Project 6 charity and is now helping others.

RUTH BROWN had only turned to the Project 6 charity, whose work includes supporting people affected by substance use, for a matter of weeks before the country was placed into lockdown in March.

The decision meant the organisati­on, which has bases in Keighley, Sheffield and Doncaster, moved many of its services online – and for Ruth, it is no exaggerati­on to say that the opportunit­y to continue to engage with the charity virtually has changed her life.

Almost daily, the 63- year- old, who lives in Sheffield, has taken part in wellbeing sessions or peer support groups focused around alcohol recovery. With the help of these – and the friends she has made – she has maintained sobriety during the pandemic, last having a drink more than a year ago, in September 2019.

“It’s kept me focused joining in,” she says. “I’ve made some really nice friends too and I call them friends. I know there’s at least four people who I could ring and say I’m having a [ rubbish] day or I want to have a drink and they’d talk to me and that’s great.”

Ruth’s drinking began to become a problem after she lost her husband to cancer six years ago. Though she’d “always liked a drink”, things began to spiral. “I thought I was dealing with it but I wasn’t really. I was drinking quite heavily,” she reflects.

Ruth would pick up a bottle as soon as she returned home from work. When she left her job after a period of sick leave due to anxiety, the drinking became only more problemati­c. “Then I’d got all this time on my hands – perhaps not as much money – but I was drinking. If I wasn’t doing anything in the day, I might open a bottle of wine at 11 o’clock. It just got out of hand.”

There was nothing particular­ly memorable about the day in 2018 when she woke up and questioned “what am I doing?” but it was the start of a journey that led to her eventual sobriety. She contacted Sheffield’s NHS alcohol service and also referred herself to Drink Wise, Age Well, a service running in the city which aimed to help people make healthier choices about their drinking as they aged.

For a long time, Ruth says she did nothing but listen at the peer support groups she attended, continuing to drink. But after “gelling” with one of the facilitato­rs, she had a moment of realisatio­n that she needed to stop, and with the help of the group and her GP, she put a halt to her drinking.

Ruth turned to Project 6 for support in February ahead of the Drink Wise, Age Well service in Sheffield coming to an end in March.

With the charity, she’s completed online training and is now a volunteer herself, co- facilitati­ng a number of groups.

“The [ group facilitato­rs] at Project 6 have been there in the background and I know if I’m struggling I’ve only got to ring them,” she says.

“I’m so grateful for the services and support I’ve had. I don’t know where I would have been without them. If

I can give something back and help somebody else that’s enough for me and worth not having a drink for.”

Project 6, which is made up of more than 50 paid staff and over 100 trained volunteers, is currently running a mixture of virtual and face- to- face services. People can refer themselves for support and in some cases, referrals are made from healthcare providers such as hospitals and GPs.

The impact of Covid- 19 has been stark. The charity says across alcohol services in Sheffield and Keighley, it would have expected to have worked with 335 people in the period since the pandemic took hold in March, but has actually supported 920.

Scott Richards, a recovery worker in Sheffield, says in July, three times as many people as is typical accessed Project 6 in the city. At the moment, group meetings, virtual or in person, are attended by an average of 20 people, up from around seven before the pandemic began.

“I think [ the pandemic] has shone a spotlight on how serious some people’s drinking was,” he reflects.

“I think some people were getting away with it a bit, able to hide it, drinking on the way back from work. But I think in lockdown, partners and children maybe have realised how significan­t a member of their family’s drinking is.”

Some people have turned to alcohol out of boredom or to cope with the pressures of daily life, he says. For many, these challenges have been enhanced by work, financial, relationsh­ip and health strains brought about by Covid- 19 and the restrictio­ns to try to manage it.

For others, a change in pace of life that has ensued from the virus has actually been an opportunit­y to seek help. “For a lot of people, they’ve had such a hectic lifestyle and they’ve been wanting to refer for a while but just haven’t found time,” Scott says. “Also, we’ve found some people are more willing to do groups when they’re sat in their home.”

Project worker Janet Thompson works on the Third Place programme, a scheme that supports street drinkers in Keighley. It aims to remove barriers to their engagement with treatment by providing access to showers, laundry facilities and hot meals and drinks. The aim then is to talk to them about safe levels of drinking and physical and mental health interventi­ons.

During the height of the lockdown, Project 6 continued to help street drinkers by providing food parcels and has since operated a Covid- secure breakfast club for small groups at a time. Janet says people not signed up to the service also turned to Project 6 through lockdown, wanting help with food provision. “It was just a case of doing what we can to help people through,” she says.

Like a number of Project 6’ s staff and volunteers, she has sought support herself for alcohol use. “Project 6 saved my life,” she says. “After years of drinking socially the rot set in and progressiv­ely over about ten years, I became a dependent drinker, nearly losing everything including my selfesteem and the will to live.”

She turned to Project 6 on two occasions and says with nonjudgmen­tal help and empathy, she was able to put down the drink for good. “Ultimately, I had a reason for living again after learning to like myself, put the past to rest, bury the shame and forgive myself. Project 6 supported me to find the strength to value myself and get my life back on track.”

As for Ruth, now knowing the positive impact that sobriety has had on her happiness and relationsh­ips with family and friends, she wishes she had reached out earlier and felt able to be more honest about the scale of her drinking.

“So many different people from different walks of lives have a problem [ with drink] and it doesn’t discrimina­te,” she says. “If I’d been diagnosed with diabetes, I wouldn’t be ashamed to tell people that and I really think we’ve got to get rid of the stereotype­s.”

More informatio­n: project6. org. uk

 ??  ??
 ?? PICTURES: PROJECT 6 ?? KEEPING GOING: Staff at the Project 6 drug and alcohol charity have continued their work across Yorkshire during the pandemic.
PICTURES: PROJECT 6 KEEPING GOING: Staff at the Project 6 drug and alcohol charity have continued their work across Yorkshire during the pandemic.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom