Research shows those dealing with substance abuse are often experiencing challenges with mental health. As a result, we treat the whole person by providing services for all forms of substance use disorders and challenges with mental health.
We meet you where you are.
We emphasize maintaining recovery in a flexible but structured environment – in many cases still allowing clients to work, go to school, and manage their current responsibilities while still participating in a complete program schedule.
Substance Abuse Services
We provide an array of services to support the various stages of substance abuse our clients are experiencing.
We use the *ASAM Assessment Criteria to determine the level of treatment our clients require.
Residential Programs
OneSource provides a medically monitored detox program in a ASAM Level 3.7 facility. When an individual’s body becomes dependent on a substance, removal of the substance can cause physical, psychological, and behavioral symptoms. When and if necessary, you may receive medication to relieve some symptoms associated with detox. This can make detox safer and easier to get through than if you tried to do it on your own.
Paying For This Service
This service is paid for by a participant’s Medicaid insurance. Self-pay is also an option; please call our office at 804-663-5243 or more information.
Guidelines For Admission
Medically monitored detox is not actual treatment but nonetheless helps in the sense that your body is cleansed of addictive substances in the short term, and it can relieve acute symptoms associated with withdrawal. Importantly, it does not address the root cause(s) of addiction, nor what you’ll have to do to maintain sobriety. It sets the stage so that you can receive the therapeutic measures to help you achieve your long-term goals, but detox alone does little to change addictive behaviors. Individuals seeking admission may be experiencing or is at risk of experiencing one or more of the following symptoms:
• Shaking
• Irregular heartbeat
• Nausea or vomiting
• Fatigue
• Insomnia
• Depression
• Hallucinations
• Sweating
Goals For Treatment
The overall goal of OneSource’s medically monitored detoxification program is to provide a safe environment for withdrawal from drugs or alcohol under medical monitoring. Medically monitored detox won’t help you avoid all of these symptoms, but it can reduce their severity and allow you to detox in a comfortable environment.
Clinically Managed High Intensity Residential Services (ASAM Level 3.5) provides a range of residential substance abuse treatment therapies and groups including assessments, relapse prevention, exploring interpersonal choices, and development of a social network supportive of recovery. Services include daily and scheduled individual, group counseling, medication, and patient education helping to ensure that the individual’s needs have been fully addressed. Other services provided are medical services, educational and skill building groups, recreational therapies, and expression activities (art, music, or movement therapies) designed to develop and apply recovery skills.
Paying For This Service
This service is paid for by a participant’s Medicaid insurance. Self-pay is also an option; please call our office at 804-663-5243 for more information.
Guidelines for Admission
Level 3.5 programs assist patients whose addiction is currently so acute that they need a 24-hour supportive treatment environment to initiate or continue a recovery process that has failed to progress.
Goals For Treatment
The overall goal of OneSource’s FH ARTS program is for the patient to learn recovery and coping skills in a residential and supportive environment.
OneSource’s Forest Hill ARTS ASAM Level 3.1 facility is a 24-hour supervised residence providing a safe, secure environment where patients can develop and practice early recovery skills such as resilience and refusal; experience the support of others in a recovery-oriented setting; and prepare for a successful transition to the full community. Level 3.1 programs combine clinical services with recovery residential services. This level of care is appropriate for patients who require additional time in a structured residential setting in order to 1) improve essential skills, 2) prepare for successful transition to a lesser level of care but 3) still may come and go with independent access to the community while unsupervised outside the facility.
Paying For This Service
This service is paid for by a participant’s Medicaid insurance. Self-pay is also an option; please call our office at 804-663-5243 or more information.
Guidelines For Admission
Populations served by OneSource’s Level 3.1 program are patients with problems applying recovery skills, self-efficacy, or lack of connection to the community systems of work, education, or family life caused by addiction.
Goals For Treatment
The overall goal of OneSource’s FH ARTS II facility is for patients to continue learning and to practice an integration of recovery and coping skills in a residential, supportive environment. Patients engaged in this level of care are expected, after successfully completing the programs, to engage in employment or academic pursuits. This programs can serve patients who may not yet acknowledge that they have an SUD or other addictive problem.
Outpatient Programs
(ASAM LEVEL 2.5)
OneSource’s Partial hospitalization program offers intense treatment in a less structured environment than a residential program, and more structure than an intensive outpatient program. Understanding how a partial hospitalization program works is critical to know if this plan or something more or less intense is required when seeking help for addiction. OneSource offers to some boarding (based on availability) during this level of treatment at no cost if a client requires housing services also.
Paying For This Service
This service is paid for by a participant’s Medicaid insurance. Self-pay is also an option; please call our office at 804-663-5243 for more information.
Guidelines For Admission
A partial hospitalization program is highly recommended for people that have already completed a residential inpatient program and need transitional living before reintegrating fully with the community. PHP is also an excellent choice for someone who needs more supervision and structure than what an intensive outpatient program can provide but less than what a residential inpatient program provides. This level of service is distinguished from Level 2.1 services in that the setting is often part of a controlled residential facility, such as hospital, that provides 24-hour support and structure and that limits access to alcohol and other drugs. The patient may reside in the facility, but the clinical programming is provided by the Level 2.5 program.
Goals For Treatment
The overall goal of a PHP program is to allow recovery from drugs and alcohol to take place in an environment that allows the most effective transition back into an addict’s or alcoholic’s community.
(ASAM LEVEL 2.1)
Intensive outpatient programs (IOPs) are treatment programs used to address addictions, depression, eating disorders, or other dependencies that do not require detoxification or round-the-clock supervision. They enable patients to continue with their normal, day-to-day lives in a way that residential treatment programs do not. Whereas residential treatment requires that clients reside on site, clients in intensive outpatient programs live at home. IOPs are sometimes used in conjunction with residential programs as a way of helping clients to adapt back more smoothly and seamlessly into their families and communities.
Paying For This Service
This service is paid for by a participant’s Medicaid insurance. Self-pay is also an option; please call our office at 804-663-5243 or more information.
Guidelines for Admission
Ideal candidates for intensive outpatient treatment have a safe home environment. This level of service and the array of settings in which it is offered provides maximum flexibility to meet the treatment needs of patients at different stages of an SUD. Level 2.1 services, for example, may be appropriate as the initial level of care for a patient whose severity of illness and level of functioning warrants this intensity; it may represent a “step down” from a more intensive level of care (Levels 3.1, 3.5, and 3.7) for a patient whose progress warrants such a transfer; and it may represent a “step up” for a patient who requires additional structured programming to stabilize addiction and mental health problems. IOPs are generally not recommended for those with severe cases of addiction or co-occurring disorders. Generally, these cases are referred to residential or inpatient treatment since they require more immersive treatment and 24-hour supervision. Patients in OneSource’s IOP program still get intensive treatment, but they are able to reside at home.
Goals For Treatment
The overall goal of OneSource’s IOP program is to provide a higher level of care than standard outpatient programs, where patients spend more time in treatment each week. It is designed to establish support mechanisms, help with relapse management, and provide coping strategies. The patient’s needs for psychiatric and medical services are addressed through consultation and referral arrangements if the patient is stable and requires only maintenance monitoring of these conditions.
Mental Health Services
OneSource provides mental health services to support the many mental health disorders often associated with substance use disorder and addiction. From a wide variety of therapy options to improving normal day-to-day life skills, social and communication skills, we work to equip our clients with the tools they need to reach their recovery goals.
Mental Health Programs
Maintaining Mental and Emotional Stability
Our Mental Health Skills Building service starts with a comprehensive assessment and development of an Individualized Service Plan (ISP). You will be assigned to a counselor that will meet with you in your home or out in the community. Your counselor will provide services including but not limited to: support and coping strategies for your mental health condition, medication management and education, activities of daily living, and links to community resources. Your counselor will serve as your advocate, and is fully committed to helping you achieve stability and balance in your life.
Paying For This Service
This service is paid for by a participant’s Medicaid insurance. Please call our office at 804-562-7371 Ext. 26 for more information.
Guidelines For Admission
1. The individual shall have one of the following as a primary Axis I DSM diagnosis:
(a) Schizophrenia or other psychotic disorder as set out in the DSM OR
(b) Major Depressive Disorder – Recurrent; Bipolar I; or Bipolar II OR
(c) Any other Axis I mental health disorder (such as, but not limited to PTSD and anxiety disorders) that a physician has documented specific to the identified individual within the past year to include all of the following: (i) that is a serious mental illness; (ii) that results in severe and recurrent disability; (iii) that produces functional limitations in the individual’s major life activities which are documented in the individual’s medical record, AND; (iv) that the individual requires individualized training in order to achieve or maintain independent living in the community.
2. The individual shall require individualized training in acquiring basic living skills such as symptom management; adherence to psychiatric and medication treatment plans; development and appropriate use of social skills and personal support system; personal hygiene; food preparation; or money management.
3. The individual shall have a prior history of any of the following: psychiatric hospitalization; residential or non-residential crisis stabilization; Intensive Community Treatment (ICT) or Program of Assertive Community Treatment (PACT) services; placement in a psychiatric residential treatment facility (RTC Level C); or Temporary Detention Order (TDO) evaluation as a result of decompensation related to serious mental illness.
4. The individual shall have had a prescription for anti-psychotic, mood stabilizing, or anti-depressant medications within the 12 months prior to the assessment date. If a physician or other practitioner who is authorized by his license to prescribe medications indicates that anti-psychotic, mood stabilizing, or antidepressant medications are medically contraindicated for the individual, the provider shall obtain medical records signed by the physician or other licensed prescriber detailing the contraindication. This documentation shall be maintained in the individual’s mental health skill-building services record, and the provider shall document and describe how the individual will be able to actively participate in and benefit from services without the assistance of medication.
Goals For Treatment
The goal for Mental Health Skills Building Services is to help you achieve and maintain community stability and independence in the most appropriate, least restrictive environment.
The Highest Level of Support
Crisis Stabilization is designed for individuals experiencing a severe decline in their mental and emotional well being. It is intended to prevent hospitalization or re-hospitalization by providing a stable environment with a high level of support services. Individuals participating in Crisis Stabilization will receive individual and family counseling, 24-hour on call support, and will be connected with community resources to meet their immediate needs.
Paying For This Service
This service is paid for by a participant’s Medicaid insurance. Self-pay is also an option; please call our office at 804-663-5243 or more information.
Program Goals
The goal of Crisis Stabilization is to intervene in a crisis situation, provide a stable environment, and avoid hospitalization.
Guidelines For Admission
To qualify for this service, individuals must demonstrate a clinical necessity for the service arising from a condition due to an acute crisis of a psychiatric nature that puts the individual at risk of psychiatric hospitalization. Individuals must meet at least two of the following criteria at the time of admission to the service:
1. Experiencing difficulty in establishing and maintaining normal interpersonal relationships to such a degree that they are at risk of psychiatric hospitalization or homelessness or isolation from social supports;
2. Experiencing difficulty in activities of daily living (ADLs) such as maintaining personal hygiene, preparing food and maintaining adequate nutrition, or managing finances to such a degree that health or safety is jeopardized;
3. Exhibiting such inappropriate behavior that immediate interventions by mental health, social services, or the judicial system are or have been necessary;
4. Exhibiting difficulty in cognitive ability (such that the individual is unable to recognize personal danger or recognize significantly inappropriate social behavior).
PSR promotes personal recovery, successful community integration and satisfactory quality of life for persons who have a mental illness or mental health concern. Psychosocial rehabilitation services and supports are collaborative, person directed, and individualized, and an essential element of the human services spectrum. They focus on helping individuals develop skills and access resources needed to increase their capacity to be successful and satisfied in the living, working, learning and social environments of their choice and include a wide continuum of services and supports.
PSR approaches are evidence-based best and promising practices in the key life domains of Employment, Education, Leisure, Wellness and Basic Living Skills as well as Family Involvement and Peer Support and Peer Delivered services.
Paying For This Service
This service is paid for by a participant’s Medicaid insurance. Self-pay is also an option; please call our office at 804-663-5243 or more information.
Guidelines For Admission
To qualify for this service, individuals must demonstrate a clinical necessity and must meet at least two of the following criteria at the time of admission to the service:
1. Experiencing difficulty in establishing and maintaining normal interpersonal relationships to such a degree that they are at risk of psychiatric hospitalization or homelessness or isolation from social supports;
2. Experiencing difficulty in activities of daily living (ADLs) such as maintaining personal hygiene, preparing food and maintaining adequate nutrition, or managing finances to such a degree that health or safety is jeopardized;
3. Exhibiting such inappropriate behavior that multiple interventions by mental health, social services, or the judicial system are or have been necessary;
4. Exhibiting difficulty in cognitive ability (such that the individual is unable to recognize personal danger or recognize significantly inappropriate