Our Kids Program

Our end goal is for your child to feel confident with themselves. They will have an easier adolescence. Kids that don’t have this time to develop these skills will struggle more in their teen years.

How Can We Help?

Our intake team is here to help and answer any questions you have.

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Insurance Accepted

We are in network with BlueCross, Tricare and we can work with most insurance companies

The Joint Commission

All our facilities have the Gold Seal to ensure you and your family are getting quality care.

What does our program look like?

Our program is a specialized Intensive Outpatient Program (IOP) for kids from 6-12 years of age. We are looking at the family’s barriers from a systemic standpoint. Our goal is to meet families where they are and support them however possible.

Our program is broken up into two groups

By attending groups, kids will learn how to get along with their peers. Children will attend three days per week. Parents will be going to their own groups to support the progress their child is making and provide a safe and supportive space to do the parental work required.  Parents will attend one day per week of their own group which can be conducted via teletherapy.

What does our program support?

We can support kids that may have difficulty with behaviors like anger, difficulty sleeping, tantrums, listening, following directions, and peer interactions and/or children that have especially struggled through the pandemic. We can support kids that may struggle with ADHD, ADD, ODD, OCD, Anxiety, Depression, PTSD, or are mildly on the autism spectrum.

We can help with the following

Difficulty Sleeping

Sleep problems are common among children. Symptoms may include, significant daytime sleepiness, psychological or developmental conditions.

Tantrums

Temper tantrums can be frustrating for any parent. But instead of looking at them as disasters, treat tantrums as opportunities for education.

Listening

There are lots of reasons kids don’t listen or follow directions. Some kids lose track of what people are saying because they struggle with focus.

Following Directions

While ADHD may be a cause of a child’s inability to follow directions, other possibilities should be ruled out first.

Peer Interactions

When kids frequently don’t follow directions, there’s often something else going on.

Pandemic Struggles

Since the pandemic, hospitals have seen more mental health emergencies among kids.

ADHD

ADHD symptoms start before age 12, and in some children, they’re noticeable as early as 3 years of age. ADHD symptoms can be mild, moderate or severe, and they may continue into adulthood

ADD

Symptoms include difficulty completing tasks. They can have trouble keeping track of their belongings and schedules, and might find themselves losing things and being late to class.

OCD

Children may have an obsessive-compulsive disorder when unwanted thoughts cause behaviors they feel they must do and interfere with their activities, or make them very upset.

Anxiety

Anxiety can make children irritable, angry, or cause fear. Symptoms can also include trouble sleeping, as well as physical symptoms like fatigue, headaches, or stomachaches.

Depression

Childhood depression is different from the normal “blues” and everyday emotions that children go through as they develop. Depression is a serious illness, it’s also a treatable one.

PTSD

A child with PTSD has constant, scary thoughts and memories of a past event. A traumatic event, such as a car crash, natural disaster, or physical abuse, can cause PTSD.

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Our Intake Specialists will take care of you, answer questions and help you decide if we are the right fit.

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