Carvell Wallace, author of 'Another Word for Love' Carvell Wallace hide caption
recovery
Tuesday
Saturday
A man wearing an Israeli flag looks toward ambulances outside a hospital in Petah Tikva, Israel, on Nov. 24. Erik Marmor/Getty Images hide caption
Tuesday
5280 High School in Denver is one of 43 secondary schools in the U.S. with a program designed for students recovering from substance use disorder and related mental health disorders. Stephanie Daniel/KUNC hide caption
Thursday
Nina Feldman, a reporter for member station WHYY in Philadelphia, had COVID-19 symptoms that persisted into what she calls "medium COVID." Hazel Lezah hide caption
People with 'medium COVID' are caught in a gray area of recovery with little support
Saturday
Will wipes away sweat on a hot day while walking down Willow Street in Lynn, Mass., as he looks to distribute safety supplies to drug users on the street. Jesse Costa/WBUR hide caption
He Lost Nearly Everything To Addiction. Then An Arrest Changed His Life
Friday
Mike Marshall is the co-founder and director of Oregon Recovers. He says he's concerned the state is failing to expand addiction treatment capacity in a strategic way. "So we put the cart before the horse," he says. Eric Westervelt/NPR hide caption
Oregon's Pioneering Drug Decriminalization Experiment Is Now Facing The Hard Test
Thursday
Armando Negron and Bellaliz Gonzalez were recovery workers in Midland, Mich., after two dam collapses flooded the area. Armando Negron and Bellaliz Gonzalez hide caption
'We Were Treated Worse Than Animals': Disaster Recovery Workers Confront COVID-19
Friday
Paul Williams (left) helps Scott Beatty build his 'backpack' guitar. It has a smaller body, meant to easily fit in a pack. Beatty is in the Culture of Recovery program which teaches instrument making to people recovering from addiction. Caitlin Tan/West Virginia Public Broadcasting hide caption
'A New Start' — In Recovery And Learning To Make Musical Instruments In Appalachia
West Virginia Public Broadcasting
Tuesday
Tuesday
There's a severe shortage of professional mental health care providers in Texas. Peer specialists — certified and paid — have begun to bridge the gap. Texas is one of more than 35 states that finance peer services through Medicaid. Martin Barraud/Getty Images hide caption