Adult mental health care focused on personal empowerment and recovery.

Adult Non-Intensive Outpatient Services

The following services are designated for adults or individuals who are 18 years of age or older. Clients can receive these services in addition to non-intensive outpatient services.

a therapist giving advice to a lady

Addictive Diseases Support Services (ADSS)

Addictive Diseases Support Services (ADSS) is a one-on-one substance use recovery service that helps our clients achieve recovery and wellness goals. Substance Abuse Professionals support their clients by helping them build their strengths and resilience. This service addresses relapse prevention planning, pre-recovery preparation, initiation of recovery, continuing recovery, and relapse.

two happy adult doing hi five

Case Management

Our clients are not always able to meet their own needs independently. As a result, our case managers help their clients to identify their needs and provide care coordination, linkages, advocacy, and support. Likewise, our case managers assist their clients in gaining access to necessary services, creating an environment that promotes recovery, improving his/her functioning, and advocating and seeking services for themselves.

Psychosocial Rehabilitation-Individual (Skills Building)

Psychosocial Rehabilitation-Individual (PSR-I) services require staff to instruct/teach, model and support our clients through the process of rehabilitative skills building. With continuous assistance from our team of behavioral specialists, our clients will develop skills to: identify and work with their mental health and recovery support team; speak on their own behalf; identify their definition of wellness and what it means to them; understand, manage and monitor one’s self (including medication); identify their strengths, needs, abilities, and preferences (SNAPs); manage themselves and prevent crisis situations; live, learn, work, and socialize successfully; develop of interpersonal, coping and functional skills; identify emotional triggers and be able to self-regulate thoughts and behaviors; gain access to necessary rehabilitative, medical, social and other services and supports; and take responsibility in personal development (as it pertains to personal growth, social and family environments, and job development skills and work performance).