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  • Neighbors Counseling: RECOVER is an Intensive Outpatient Program is a structured, trauma-informed mental health treatment program designed for individuals who need more support than traditional weekly therapy can provide, but do not require inpatient or residential care.

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  • Through evidence-based treatment, group connection, psychiatric collaboration, and skills-focused programming, RECOVER helps participants navigate trauma, depression, chronic stress, and other mental health challenges while remaining connected to their daily lives, families, and communities.

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  • RECOVER bridges the gap between outpatient therapy and higher levels of care, providing a pathway toward greater stability, resilience, and meaningful recovery.

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Recover
Intensive Outpatient Program

A Parth Foward

IOP Groups

What is an Intensive Outpatient Program (IOP)?

Many people are familiar with weekly therapy. Others may know about inpatient or residential treatment. An Intensive Outpatient Program falls somewhere in between.

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RECOVER: Intensive Outpatient Program is designed for individuals who need more support, structure, and connection than a traditional weekly therapy schedule can provide.

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Participants attend multiple therapeutic sessions each week, creating more opportunities to build skills, process challenges, and make meaningful progress with the support of both clinicians and peers.

Is this Right for Me? 

There isn't one answer, but there are times when additional care can be helpful. Maybe therapy is helping, but progress feels slower than you'd like.
 

Maybe you're spending most of the week struggling between sessions. Maybe symptoms are impacting your work, relationships, or daily life.

 

Maybe you know the tools, but have difficulty applying them consistently when life gets overwhelming.
Needing more support doesn't mean you've failed. It doesn't mean you're in crisis.

Why Recover?

At the heart of RECOVER: Intensive Outpatient Program is the belief that healing is about more than symptom reduction.

 

Our approach combines trauma-informed care, Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT), psychiatric collaboration, skill-building, and meaningful connection with others who understand the challenges of recovery.

 

ACT helps individuals develop flexibility, resilience, and the ability to move toward what matters most, even when difficult thoughts, emotions, or experiences are present.

Take Control of Your Story Again

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