Recovery-Ready Workplace

man and woman walking down office hall conversing and laughing

Employers, employees, customers, and society all benefit from recovery-ready workplace policies. Among the benefits are an expanded labor force, increased worker well-being, decreased turnover, improved productivity, and reduced health care costs. Employers adopting such policies help to reduce societal stigma and misunderstanding by fostering a culture in which SUD is recognized as a treatable health condition from which one can recovery, and people in or seeking recovery are welcomed and supported in the workplace.

Recovery-ready workplaces may:

The federal government, non-federal public sector, and the private sector can all establish recovery-ready workplaces. Additionally, states, local governments, unions, trade or industry groups, chambers of commerce, or independent entities such as community-based organizations, can lead multi-employer efforts that offer training, technical assistance, consultation, and certification as recovery-ready workplaces.

1 Here the term "substance misuse" means use of prescription drugs other than prescribed or without a prescription, problem use of alcohol, or any use of illegal drugs.