Recovery

Reimagined • redefined • Redesigned


Who is Dr. P?

Felecia Pullen Ph.D (Dr. P) is a social scientist with over 10 years of experience in the fields of addiction, prevention, and recovery. She specializes in the development of programming and curricula to: Assess impacts of political determinants of health, reduce stigma and strengthen corporate culture; deinstitutionalize racism in healthcare; and build communities of recovery.

Dr. Pullen’s research of political determinants of health on the attainment of Recovery & Negative Recovery Capital has been a resource guide to best practices for the federal government, single-state addiction and mental health agencies, city hospitals, private-pay healthcare institutions, colleges and universities, law enforcement, community-stakeholders, and not-for-profit leaders who seek to understand effective tenets of recovery within their respective fields.

Through her virtual trainings, on demand courses, and public speaking engagements, Dr. P teaches how to redesign, redefine and reimagine recovery.


Corporate, Healthcare & Professional Trainings

Corporate Social Respons(ability)

A training for corporations to reimagine recovery in the workplace. This training is designed to help companies support individuals in recovery while increasing their productivity, and minimizing revenue loss.

Peers, Coaches, & Lic. Professionals

A 4-hr training to teach Peers how to utilize the Mixed-Method Recovery Capital Tool (MRCAT) to assess the existence of Recovery Capital and Negative Recovery Capital before developing recovery plans.

Racial equity in healthcare

This training teaches healthcare providers how structural racism such as the intersectionality of race, geography, poverty and addiction contributes to racial disparities in treatment, harm reduction, prevention and recovery.


Community-Based Harm Reduction

Community Response to Opioid Overdose (CROO)

An opportunity for community-based organizations, residents and teens to build resilience, respond to public conditions contributing to substance misuse and opioid overdoses.

Substance and addiction free environments (SAFE)

A teen-led initiative that teaches young adults how to civically engage in preventing substance misuse among their peers.


Press