
SERVICES
We offer comprehensive mental health and support services, including crisis intervention, therapy for individuals and families, medication support, psychosocial rehabilitation, skills training, and targeted case management to promote well-being and recovery.



Superior
HealthPlan
WE ACCEPT THE FOLLOWING INSURANCES:
What Is Crisis Intervention?
Crisis intervention is a fast, short-term response designed to help someone experiencing intense mental, emotional, physical, or behavioral distress. The goal is to stabilize the individual, and restore their ability to function.
Who Is Eligible?
To qualify individuals must:
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Be enrolled in and actively
covered by Texas Medicaid
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Be experiencing a current crisis
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Complete a crisis assessment
What Is Considered a Crisis?
If you or someone you know is in immediate danger or at risk of harming themselves or others, please call 911 right away. Your safety is the top priority, and emergency responders are trained to help in critical situations. Don’t wait—get help now.
Crisis Intervention

Individual Therapy
Individual therapy is a collaborative and structured form of talk therapy that involves a client working one-on-one with a licensed mental health professional in a safe, confidential, and supportive environment. The primary goal of individual therapy is to help the client explore their thoughts, feelings, and behaviors in order to gain insight, resolve personal issues, and develop effective coping strategies. This type of therapy can address a wide range of mental health concerns, including anxiety, depression, trauma, grief, stress, relationship issues, and life transitions. Therapists may use various therapeutic approaches—such as cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT), psychodynamic therapy, solution-focused therapy, or mindfulness-based strategies—tailored to meet the unique needs of the client. Through the therapeutic relationship, individuals can build self-awareness, increase emotional resilience, and work toward meaningful personal growth and improved psychological well-being.
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Family Therapy
​Family therapy is a guided form of counseling that brings family members together with a licensed mental health professional to work through challenges in a safe and respectful space. The aim is to strengthen relationships, improve communication, and address issues affecting the family unit as a whole. This approach helps families navigate conflicts, parenting difficulties, major life changes, grief, and mental health concerns. By exploring patterns, roles, and interactions, the therapist helps the family uncover underlying issues and build more supportive, connected relationships. Techniques may draw from models like structural family therapy, systems theory, or solution-focused strategies, all tailored to the family’s specific dynamics and needs. Ultimately, family therapy encourages healing, mutual understanding, and tools for lasting connection and growth.


Targeted Case Management (TCM) Services
Targeted Case Management (TCM) Services are designed to support individuals within specific populations who meet certain criteria. Under the Texas Medicaid Program, Mental Health Targeted Case Management (MHTCM) is available to individuals of any age who have been diagnosed with a chronic mental illness—or multiple mental health conditions—as outlined in the most recent edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM) by the American Psychiatric Association (APA). Eligibility is determined through a standardized assessment process, which identifies the client’s need for MHTCM services.
MHTCM includes two levels of service:
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Intensive Case Management: Primarily delivered in the community, these services are provided to the client or their legally authorized representative (LAR) to assist in identifying, coordinating, and securing services that meet the client’s individual needs. The client may or may not be present during these interactions.
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Routine Case Management: These services are generally office-based and offer similar coordination and support for accessing care and services, but at a lower intensity than intensive case management.
Eligibility by Age:
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Clients 20 years old and younger may qualify for both intensive and routine case management services.
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Clients 21 years and older are eligible for routine case management only.

Medication Training and Support Services
Medication Training and Support Services provide clients with education and guidance about their prescribed medications, including possible side effects. These services serve as an introductory step in helping individuals understand their mental health conditions and the important role medication plays in managing symptoms and supporting long-term stability in the community.
Skills Training and Development
Skills Training and Development provides instruction to individuals, their legally authorized representatives (LARs), or caregivers to address challenges related to serious mental illness that impact daily life. The goal is to build essential life skills that support independence, communication, appropriate social behavior, and self-sufficiency. Topics may include hygiene, social interaction, anger and stress management, communication, budgeting, parenting, transportation, and accessing community resources. Caregivers also receive guidance to better support the individual’s needs. Note: This service cannot be provided at the same time as psychosocial rehabilitative services.


Psychosocial Rehabilitation
Psychosocial Rehabilitative Services are structured interventions—social, behavioral, and cognitive in nature—delivered by members of a client’s care team. These services are designed to help individuals age 17 and older who are living with serious mental illness rebuild their ability to form and maintain healthy relationships, achieve success in school or work, and manage everyday life tasks independently.