John J. Pershing VAMC - West Plains CBOC
John J. Pershing VAMC - West Plains CBOC, part of the Health System, is located ...
FCC Behavioral Health's RISE treatment center is an alcohol and substance abuse recovery center in West Plains, Missouri. RISE exclusively serves adolescents ages 12 through 17 with their Comprehensive Substance Abuse Treatment and Rehab (CSTAR) programs. The facility shares space with the larger FCC Behavioral Health campus, providing a relaxing setting with modern amenities.
RISE accepts clients regardless of gender, sexuality, or religious background. The only qualifier for treatment is a licensed medical professional’s diagnosis of substance use.
The 60 day inpatient program sees clients live at the RISE center for the duration of the program, where they receive up to 60 hours of treatment each week. Days are highly structured, revolving around group and individual therapy, counseling, wellness activities, and free time. Each treatment plan is crafted around a client’s specific needs.
Clients are encouraged to socialize during their stay to offer support and learn from one another’s experiences. Staff are present 24 hours daily to provide close supervision and clinical support as needed.
The day treatment program does not require on campus residency. Instead, clients visit the facility throughout the week to receive therapy and counseling from their support team. When they meet and for how long varies based on the client’s schedule to better accommodate everyone’s needs.
Outpatient treatment is based on a structured schedule similar to the inpatient program. However, clients stay home and may continue working and attending school during treatment. Thus, it’s ideal for those who come from stable living situations and don’t require as much monitoring.
This variation of the day treatment program extends services beyond the RISE facility to a client’s home and school. Clients who complete inpatient or outpatient care may be transitioned into this program as a means of ongoing aftercare. The goal of supported recovery is to provide a continuing foundation as clients learn to use the coping skills they learned in treatment.
FCC Behavioral Health RISE is accredited by the Commission on Accreditation of Rehabilitation Facilities and is a National Health Service Corp site.
Contact us for more information: (417) 257-9152
Connect with FCC Behavioral Health - Adolescent RISE by calling their admissions team directly.
(417) 257-9152 Website Get DirectionsThe Commission on Accreditation of Rehabilitation Facilities (CARF) is a non-profit organization that specifically accredits rehab organizations. Founded in 1966, CARF's, mission is to help service providers like rehab facilities maintain high standards of care.
CARF Accreditation: Yes
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) is a therapy modality that focuses on the relationship between one's thoughts, feelings, and behaviors. It is used to establish and allow for healthy responses to thoughts and feelings (instead of unhealthy responses, like using drugs or alcohol). CBT has been proven effective for recovering addicts of all kinds, and is used to strengthen a patient's own self-awareness and ability to self-regulate. CBT allows individuals to monitor their own emotional state, become more adept at communicating with others, and manage stress without needing to engage in substance abuse.
Family Therapy is strongly encouraged and is scheduled on a case-by-case basis in order to promote access to services. The Family Therapist works directly with the family to schedule appointments. Family Therapy is a planned, face-to-face, goal oriented therapeutic interaction with a qualified staff member in accordance with an individualized recovery care plan. The Family Therapist works with each family to identify family strengths, needs and preferences. The purpose of family therapy is to address and resolve problems in family interaction related to the substance use problem and recovery.
Group Counseling is face-to-face, goal oriented therapeutic interaction among a counselor and two (2) or more adolescent’s as specified in individual recovery care plans designed to promote the adolescent’s functioning and recovery through personal disclosure and interpersonal interaction among group members. The usual and customary size of group counseling sessions is eight (8) adolescent’s and shall not exceed twelve (12) adolescent’s in order to promote full participation, disclosure and feedback. Specialized group counseling topics include, but are not limited to: Moral Reconation Therapy, Anger Management, Relapse Prevention, gender specific groups, trauma groups and co-occurring specific groups.
Individual Counseling is a structured, goal-oriented therapeutic process in which the adolescent interacts on a face-to-face basis with a counselor in accordance with the individual’s rehabilitation plan in order to resolve problems related to substance use which interferes with the person(s)-served functioning. Various treatment modalities are provided by appropriately trained staff to include, but are not limited to: Motivational Interviewing, Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, Moral Reconation Therapy, Integrated Dual Disorders Treatment and Relapse Prevention Therapy.
Life skills trainings involve all the skills a person must have in order to function successfully in the world. These include time management, career guidance, money management, and effective communication. Truly successful addiction recovery is based on the ability to not only live substance-free, but to thrive. Life skills teaches the practical necessities of functioning in society, which sets clients up for success in life, and therefore sobriety.
Motivational Interviewing (MI) is a clinical approach to helping people with substance abuse issues and other conditions shift behavior in positive ways. It is more goal-oriented than traditional psychotherapy, as MI counselors directly attempt to get clients to consider making behavioral change (rather than wait for them to come to conclusions themselves). Its primary purpose is to resolve ambivalence and help clients become able to make healthy choices freely.
Trauma therapy addresses traumatic incidents from a client's past that are likely affecting their present-day experience. Trauma is often one of the primary triggers and potential causes of addiction, and can stem from child sexual abuse, domestic violence, having a parent with a mental illness, losing one or both parents at a young age, teenage or adult sexual assault, or any number of other factors. The purpose of trauma therapy is to allow a patient to process trauma and move through and past it, with the help of trained and compassionate mental health professionals.
Family Therapy is strongly encouraged and is scheduled on a case-by-case basis in order to promote access to services. The Family Therapist works directly with the family to schedule appointments. Family Therapy is a planned, face-to-face, goal oriented therapeutic interaction with a qualified staff member in accordance with an individualized recovery care plan. The Family Therapist works with each family to identify family strengths, needs and preferences. The purpose of family therapy is to address and resolve problems in family interaction related to the substance use problem and recovery.
Group Counseling is face-to-face, goal oriented therapeutic interaction among a counselor and two (2) or more adolescent’s as specified in individual recovery care plans designed to promote the adolescent’s functioning and recovery through personal disclosure and interpersonal interaction among group members. The usual and customary size of group counseling sessions is eight (8) adolescent’s and shall not exceed twelve (12) adolescent’s in order to promote full participation, disclosure and feedback. Specialized group counseling topics include, but are not limited to: Moral Reconation Therapy, Anger Management, Relapse Prevention, gender specific groups, trauma groups and co-occurring specific groups.
Individual Counseling is a structured, goal-oriented therapeutic process in which the adolescent interacts on a face-to-face basis with a counselor in accordance with the individual’s rehabilitation plan in order to resolve problems related to substance use which interferes with the person(s)-served functioning. Various treatment modalities are provided by appropriately trained staff to include, but are not limited to: Motivational Interviewing, Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, Moral Reconation Therapy, Integrated Dual Disorders Treatment and Relapse Prevention Therapy.
Life skills trainings involve all the skills a person must have in order to function successfully in the world. These include time management, career guidance, money management, and effective communication. Truly successful addiction recovery is based on the ability to not only live substance-free, but to thrive. Life skills teaches the practical necessities of functioning in society, which sets clients up for success in life, and therefore sobriety.
Motivational Interviewing (MI) is a clinical approach to helping people with substance abuse issues and other conditions shift behavior in positive ways. It is more goal-oriented than traditional psychotherapy, as MI counselors directly attempt to get clients to consider making behavioral change (rather than wait for them to come to conclusions themselves). Its primary purpose is to resolve ambivalence and help clients become able to make healthy choices freely.
Trauma therapy addresses traumatic incidents from a client's past that are likely affecting their present-day experience. Trauma is often one of the primary triggers and potential causes of addiction, and can stem from child sexual abuse, domestic violence, having a parent with a mental illness, losing one or both parents at a young age, teenage or adult sexual assault, or any number of other factors. The purpose of trauma therapy is to allow a patient to process trauma and move through and past it, with the help of trained and compassionate mental health professionals.
Group Counseling is face-to-face, goal oriented therapeutic interaction among a counselor and two (2) or more adolescent’s as specified in individual recovery care plans designed to promote the adolescent’s functioning and recovery through personal disclosure and interpersonal interaction among group members. The usual and customary size of group counseling sessions is eight (8) adolescent’s and shall not exceed twelve (12) adolescent’s in order to promote full participation, disclosure and feedback. Specialized group counseling topics include, but are not limited to: Moral Reconation Therapy, Anger Management, Relapse Prevention, gender specific groups, trauma groups and co-occurring specific groups.
Individual Counseling is a structured, goal-oriented therapeutic process in which the adolescent interacts on a face-to-face basis with a counselor in accordance with the individual’s rehabilitation plan in order to resolve problems related to substance use which interferes with the person(s)-served functioning. Various treatment modalities are provided by appropriately trained staff to include, but are not limited to: Motivational Interviewing, Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, Moral Reconation Therapy, Integrated Dual Disorders Treatment and Relapse Prevention Therapy.
Life skills trainings involve all the skills a person must have in order to function successfully in the world. These include time management, career guidance, money management, and effective communication. Truly successful addiction recovery is based on the ability to not only live substance-free, but to thrive. Life skills teaches the practical necessities of functioning in society, which sets clients up for success in life, and therefore sobriety.
Motivational Interviewing (MI) is a clinical approach to helping people with substance abuse issues and other conditions shift behavior in positive ways. It is more goal-oriented than traditional psychotherapy, as MI counselors directly attempt to get clients to consider making behavioral change (rather than wait for them to come to conclusions themselves). Its primary purpose is to resolve ambivalence and help clients become able to make healthy choices freely.
Trauma therapy addresses traumatic incidents from a client's past that are likely affecting their present-day experience. Trauma is often one of the primary triggers and potential causes of addiction, and can stem from child sexual abuse, domestic violence, having a parent with a mental illness, losing one or both parents at a young age, teenage or adult sexual assault, or any number of other factors. The purpose of trauma therapy is to allow a patient to process trauma and move through and past it, with the help of trained and compassionate mental health professionals.
Individual Counseling is a structured, goal-oriented therapeutic process in which the adolescent interacts on a face-to-face basis with a counselor in accordance with the individual’s rehabilitation plan in order to resolve problems related to substance use which interferes with the person(s)-served functioning. Various treatment modalities are provided by appropriately trained staff to include, but are not limited to: Motivational Interviewing, Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, Moral Reconation Therapy, Integrated Dual Disorders Treatment and Relapse Prevention Therapy.
Life skills trainings involve all the skills a person must have in order to function successfully in the world. These include time management, career guidance, money management, and effective communication. Truly successful addiction recovery is based on the ability to not only live substance-free, but to thrive. Life skills teaches the practical necessities of functioning in society, which sets clients up for success in life, and therefore sobriety.
Motivational Interviewing (MI) is a clinical approach to helping people with substance abuse issues and other conditions shift behavior in positive ways. It is more goal-oriented than traditional psychotherapy, as MI counselors directly attempt to get clients to consider making behavioral change (rather than wait for them to come to conclusions themselves). Its primary purpose is to resolve ambivalence and help clients become able to make healthy choices freely.
Trauma therapy addresses traumatic incidents from a client's past that are likely affecting their present-day experience. Trauma is often one of the primary triggers and potential causes of addiction, and can stem from child sexual abuse, domestic violence, having a parent with a mental illness, losing one or both parents at a young age, teenage or adult sexual assault, or any number of other factors. The purpose of trauma therapy is to allow a patient to process trauma and move through and past it, with the help of trained and compassionate mental health professionals.
Life skills trainings involve all the skills a person must have in order to function successfully in the world. These include time management, career guidance, money management, and effective communication. Truly successful addiction recovery is based on the ability to not only live substance-free, but to thrive. Life skills teaches the practical necessities of functioning in society, which sets clients up for success in life, and therefore sobriety.
Motivational Interviewing (MI) is a clinical approach to helping people with substance abuse issues and other conditions shift behavior in positive ways. It is more goal-oriented than traditional psychotherapy, as MI counselors directly attempt to get clients to consider making behavioral change (rather than wait for them to come to conclusions themselves). Its primary purpose is to resolve ambivalence and help clients become able to make healthy choices freely.
Trauma therapy addresses traumatic incidents from a client's past that are likely affecting their present-day experience. Trauma is often one of the primary triggers and potential causes of addiction, and can stem from child sexual abuse, domestic violence, having a parent with a mental illness, losing one or both parents at a young age, teenage or adult sexual assault, or any number of other factors. The purpose of trauma therapy is to allow a patient to process trauma and move through and past it, with the help of trained and compassionate mental health professionals.
Motivational Interviewing (MI) is a clinical approach to helping people with substance abuse issues and other conditions shift behavior in positive ways. It is more goal-oriented than traditional psychotherapy, as MI counselors directly attempt to get clients to consider making behavioral change (rather than wait for them to come to conclusions themselves). Its primary purpose is to resolve ambivalence and help clients become able to make healthy choices freely.
Trauma therapy addresses traumatic incidents from a client's past that are likely affecting their present-day experience. Trauma is often one of the primary triggers and potential causes of addiction, and can stem from child sexual abuse, domestic violence, having a parent with a mental illness, losing one or both parents at a young age, teenage or adult sexual assault, or any number of other factors. The purpose of trauma therapy is to allow a patient to process trauma and move through and past it, with the help of trained and compassionate mental health professionals.
Trauma therapy addresses traumatic incidents from a client's past that are likely affecting their present-day experience. Trauma is often one of the primary triggers and potential causes of addiction, and can stem from child sexual abuse, domestic violence, having a parent with a mental illness, losing one or both parents at a young age, teenage or adult sexual assault, or any number of other factors. The purpose of trauma therapy is to allow a patient to process trauma and move through and past it, with the help of trained and compassionate mental health professionals.
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