House of Hope Provo – Zoe’s Story


 

House of Hope Provo – Zoe’s Story – The House of Hope is a non-profit organization that has provided statewide substance abuse treatment services since for 65 years. The House of Hope’s Salt Lake and Provo programs are gender-specific programs that provide substance abuse treatment services to women, pregnant women and mothers with children. Mothers in need of substance abuse treatment services can bring their children (under age 8) into treatment with them at the House of Hope. The House of Hope in Salt Lake City provides residential treatment for up to 45 women and 45 children daily, and serves up to 40 outpatient/day treatment women and 25 of their children daily. The Hope Center for Children can serve up to 75 children daily whose mothers attend the House of Hope programs. The House of Hope in Provo provides residential treatment for up to 16 women and 28 children daily. House of Hope Therapists and Case Managers provide caring, best-practice treatment for addiction and co-occurring mental health issues. Treatment is focused on the biological, psychological, and social causes of addiction, and is holistic in nature. Services include group, individual and family therapy; group and individual behavior management; substance abuse education; relapse prevention; life skills; communication skills; anger management; and trauma groups. Parents in the program are taught positive parenting skills aimed at rebuilding and strengthening the parent/child attachment relationship. Case managers link each mother and

 

Community center liftsresidents of central city

Filed under: drug abuse help centers for pregnant women

Washington Muhammad coordinates the center's Self Expression Teen Theater, an after-school program in which teens perform skits and talk about the risks of sex, alcohol, tobacco, gangs, and other issues. 'When teens … It's somewhere to be to help you …
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For Moore, this season certainly a success

Filed under: drug abuse help centers for pregnant women

On the other end was his mom, Doris Moore, a woman with a history of drug abuse who always resisted her middle son's efforts to convince her she needed rehab. "One day she finally called me and said, 'I'm ready, I'll do it,''' D.J. said. "I didn't want …
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