At Concierge Recovery we provide comprehensive care from intervention to long-term recovery, ensuring that every aspect of the process is expertly managed.
Whether you’re in the middle of a crisis or looking for guidance after treatment, Concierge Recovery offers the expertise and personalized care you need.
Why choose Concierge Recovery?
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We understand that privacy is a top priority. Every aspect of our service is conducted with the highest level of discretion.
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No two journeys are alike. We handcraft individualized plans for each family, ensuring that every need is met.
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While therapists provide ongoing mental health care, interventionists are crisis-driven, offering hands-on support outside the office.
The Process
Recovery is a journey, and we are committed to supporting you every step of the way. While the timeline below represents a comprehensive six-month care plan, we understand that every family’s needs are different. Whether you require the full process or just one phase, we meet you where you are and provide the care that fits your unique situation.
Month 1-2: Initial intervention and placement in a treatment program.
Month 3-4: Transitional family therapy and psychoeducation for family members.
Month 5-6: Sober coaching, including strategic planning, financial literacy, and helping the client rediscover their passions.
Phase I
Risk Assessments and Evaluations
Our comprehensive evaluations ensure that all risks are accounted for and addressed with the proper care.
Interventions
Immediate and crisis-driven. We specialize in three types of interventions, tailored to each family’s situation.
Phase II
Treatment Placement Expertise
With a deep knowledge of treatment programs across the country, we help you find the best possible match based on your needs and circumstances.
Phase III
Mental Health and Sober Coaching
Once treatment is complete, we provide 1-on-1 coaching to help you transition back into everyday life, guiding you in long-term strategic planning, executive functioning, and more.
Family Therapy and Education
Through all 3 phases we offer transitional family therapy and psychoeducation to help families navigate the challenges of recovery together..
Consultation
Ready to take the first step? Our initial consultation lasts between 60-90 minutes and is designed to evaluate the family dynamics, complete a family genome, and discuss contract length and costs.
How Drugs Hijack the Brain’s Decision-Making
Written and produced by Yale Neuroscience PhD student Clara Liao. Addiction is now understood to be a brain disease. Whether it’s alcohol, prescription pain pills, nicotine, gambling, or something else, overcoming an addiction isn’t as simple as just stopping or exercising greater control over impulses. That’s because addiction develops when the pleasure circuits in the brain get overwhelmed, in a way that can become chronic and sometimes even permanent. This is what’s at play when you hear about reward “systems” or “pathways” and the role of dopamine when it comes to addiction. But what does any of that really mean?
How Depression and Anxiety Affect the Brain
For many people, depression turns out to be one of the most disabling illnesses that we have in society. Despite the treatments that we have available, many people are not responding that well. It's a disorder that can be very disabling in society. It's also a disorder that has medical consequences. By understand the neurobiology of depression we hope to be able more to find the right treatment for the patient suffering from this disease. The current standard of care for the treatment of depression is based on what we call the monoamine deficiency hypothesis. Essentially, presuming that one of three neurotransmitters in the brain is deficient or underactive. But the reality is, there are more than 100 neurotransmitters in the brain. And billions of connections between neurons. So we know that that's a limited hypothesis. Neurotransmitters can be thought of as the chemical messengers within the brain, it's what helps one cell in the brain communicate with another, to pass that message along from one brain region to another.