Abstract

The National Alliance for Medication Assisted Recovery (NAMA Recovery) has a new website, and despite some board changes, is moving forward in its mission. There are other players who have recently left the NAMA Recovery board, namely Walter Ginter, Joycelyn Woods, and Bob Lubran, who will still be very much involved with helping promote the rights of patients. Lubran, who was formerly with the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration and is now involved with other opioid treatment initiatives, including Stop Stigma Now, resigned, as did Ginter and Woods. For NAMA Recovery, which is headed by Zachary C. Talbott, president and CEO of Talbott Legacy Centers and a long‐time patient and advocate, the transition “recognizes and celebrates a plethora of patient advocates that have gone before us and who no longer serve on our board.” The “majority MOUD patient board will continue to focus on the modernization of this critical organization, the only one whose sole mission is to represent the voices of and advocate for MOUD patients,” Talbott added. For the NAMA Recovery website, go to https://namarecovery.org/.

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