How far is the reach of RecoveryGo?
Just two months ago, the Hazelden Betty Ford Foundation’s outpatient addiction treatment and mental health services were available in 15 cities. Today, those high-quality, insurance-eligible services are available to people in 7,648 cities—and every rural area in between—across eight states, and counting.
Our care is no longer limited to the places where we have rooms, walls, chairs, flip charts and licensed clinicians physically located. Thanks to Hazelden Betty Ford’s growing virtual service options, your patients and clients can get help from the nation’s leader in addiction and co-occurring mental health treatment no matter where they live in California, Florida, Illinois, Minnesota, New Jersey, New York, Oregon or Washington. From Green Acres, CA, to Cooperstown, NY, we are there.
While Hazelden Betty Ford will be expanding virtual outpatient and mental health services to even more states soon, many of our other RecoveryGo telehealth solutions—like the new one-day, no-cost virtual family program—are already available to everyone in every state, and beyond. Together with you, we look forward to spreading recovery to every corner of the country.
If your patients and clients are in need of outpatient addiction treatment, mental health or family programming, please reach out to us to learn more. Visit our website or call a patient access coordinator at 1-800-257-7800.
New Research Available—Learn more about the effectiveness of telehealth for addiction treatment and recovery in the latest research update from the Butler Center for Research.
Free Online Resources
Let's Talk Webinars
May 20 | noon-1 p.m. Central
Differing Shades of Shame in Substance Use Disorders
Presenter: Kristen Schmidt, MD
Shame is a word often used by both patients and care providers in addressing substance use disorders. But there are differing shades of shame—with different implications for recovery. Join psychiatrist Kristen Schmidt, MD, to define and differentiate healthy and unhealthy aspects of shame that can either impede or promote recovery from substance use disorders. Dr. Schmidt will also discuss emerging evidence on the interaction between stigma and shame.
June 10 | 1:30 p.m. Central
How to Help Families Struggling with Teen Substance Use
Presenter: Kate Roselle, MA, MBA, LPCC, Youth Outreach Manager
When a young person develops a substance use problem, parents and other family members looking to cope sometimes adopt unhealthy behaviors themselves such as keeping secrets or finding scapegoats. Join counselor Kate Roselle to examine how to help the families you serve when adolescent substance use is in the picture. Roselle will share important insights and practical strategies for working with families, especially when they begin to engage with in-person or virtual treatment services.
Online Support Meetings, Family Resources, Apps and More
Check out all of the free support resources to help keep your patients’ and clients’ recovery strong.
Podcasts
Let’s Talk Addiction and Recovery: An award-winning podcast series hosted by William C. Moyers
Check out all of our episodes including interviews about addiction recovery and support for families and family roles when addiction takes hold.
Help Us Advocate
Hazelden Betty Ford is part of a broad coalition of behavioral health organizations and patient advocacy groups asking Congress for crisis funding to help ensure patients in need continue to get services during the pandemic. We are working with our trade association, the National Association of Addiction Treatment Providers, to advocate for $38.5 billion in proposed direct payments to organizations providing mental health and substance use disorder treatment. U.S. House leaders are looking to pass another pandemic relief package as early this
Friday. At this time, the proposal does not include all of the funding that our coalition is seeking. You can help by thanking your own U.S. Senators and Representative if they have signed on in support of the $38.5 billion in emergency funding for behavioral health organizations or by asking for their support.
24/7 Access to Help
Our Referent Relations team is available to support you and your patients and clients—now amid the pandemic and always.
To reach a member of the team and start an admission, call 1-855-348-7018 or email us at [email protected]. Additional resources include the National Suicide Hotline at 1-800-273-8255.
Thank you for your commitment and compassion to the individuals and families that need our collective help now more than ever.
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