Teen Mental Health Treatment In Hillsborough, NC

Teen mental health treatment in Hillsborough, NC, delivers structured therapeutic programming for adolescents ages 12-18 experiencing depression, anxiety, trauma, and behavioral challenges. Brightpath operates evidence-based mental health programs developed by licensed marriage and family therapists with developmental expertise. The clinical approach emphasizes collaborative therapeutic relationships where adolescents participate actively in treatment planning and skill development.

The Commission on Accreditation of Rehabilitation Facilities granted CARF accreditation to our programs, demonstrating quality standards compliance. The North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services issued state licenses for partial hospitalization and day activity services. Our licensing permits mental health service delivery at both Hillsborough and Wake Forest treatment locations.

Four distinct treatment tracks deliver developmentally targeted interventions matching adolescent developmental stages. Summit Track programming targets adolescents ages 15-18 navigating high school developmental challenges. Meadow Track serves younger adolescents ages 12-15, addressing middle school social-emotional needs. River Program delivers foundational DBT training for teens entering intensive mental health treatment. Horizon Program provides step-down services for adolescents transitioning from higher treatment intensities.

Dialectical Behavior Therapy forms the therapeutic foundation, teaching emotional regulation and distress tolerance capabilities. Attachment-based interventions target relationship security and interpersonal connection development. Weekly psychiatric evaluation sessions with Nurse Practitioners or Physician Assistants occur for every adolescent, independent of medication requirements.

Monday, Tuesday, and Thursday admission scheduling provides multiple weekly entry opportunities with 9:00 AM and 10:30 AM daily time slots. The Hillsborough treatment center serves Chapel Hill, Durham, Carrboro, Mebane, Burlington, and surrounding Orange County communities.

Approximately 17% of U.S. youth experience mental health disorders annually based on national prevalence data. Depression affects 128,000 North Carolina adolescents ages 12-17, with only 46.8% receiving professional mental health services. Mental health conditions affect 70% of juveniles in justice system. Treatment access gaps demonstrate urgent need for adolescent mental health programming throughout Hillsborough communities.

Brightpath's teen mental health treatment in Hillsborough provides the following program features:

  • DBT protocol implementation
  • Mandatory weekly psychiatric consultations
  • Three weekly admission opportunities
  • Morning admission time flexibility
  • Developmental maturity-based placement
  • Age-separated group programming
  • Weekly PHP family sessions
  • Educational homebound coordination
  • Therapeutic music programming
  • Nature-based horticultural therapy
  • CARF quality certification
  • State licensure compliance
  • Orange County location access


    How Brightpath Works with Teens

    Clinical philosophy foundations guiding Brightpath's adolescent mental health approach include:

    Be Open-Hearted & Open-Minded

    Unconditional Positive Regard

    We are intentional about shifting our bias and setting aside our own ego, so that no one has to feel judged or has to hide who they are. We meet everyone with whole-hearted curiosity and compassion. Especially when life is heavy. You're already worthy, already welcome.

    Shame compounds mental health struggles when adolescents hide symptoms, fearing judgment from treatment providers. Therapeutic safety emerges through unconditional acceptance, enabling honest disclosure about behaviors and experiences.

    Authentic connections develop when teens experience acceptance rather than evaluation during vulnerable moments. Recovery accelerates within therapeutic relationships, prioritizing understanding over criticism.

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    What Types of Teen Mental Health Treatment Programs Does Brightpath Offer in Hillsborough?

    The different types of teen mental health treatment programs Brightpath offers in Hillsborough are highlighted below:

    Program

    Partial Hospitalization Program (PHP)

    Description

    PHP operates five weekdays, delivering intensive therapeutic programming from 9:00 AM through 3:00 PM for adolescents ages 12-18. This structured daily treatment serves teens requiring intensive intervention following inpatient psychiatric care or during acute mental health episodes.

    Two developmentally separated tracks ensure age-appropriate peer interactions throughout programming. Ages 15-18 receive Summit Track services addressing high school developmental concerns.

    Ages 12-15 participate in Meadow Track programming focused on middle school developmental challenges. Clinical assessment determines track placement based on developmental readiness beyond chronological age factors.

    Standard treatment duration spans 4-6 weeks with 5-week completion timeframes. Clinical necessity justification permits up to 2 additional treatment weeks. New admissions occur on Mondays, Tuesdays, and Thursdays at 9:00 AM and 10:30 AM slots.

    What to Expect

    DBT skills training occurs through 5-week curriculum cycles, teaching emotional regulation, distress tolerance, interpersonal effectiveness, and mindfulness competencies.

    Individual therapy sessions weekly with assigned primary therapists focus on personal skill application. Session formatting accommodates teen preferences through 60-minute single sessions, dual 30-minute sessions, or daily 15-minute meetings.

    Psychiatric provider consultations occur weekly for all teens, addressing medication considerations, sleep patterns, nutritional wellness, and physiological symptom management. Creative expression activities integrate throughout daily schedules.

    Hannah delivers structured music therapy interventions, facilitating creative emotional expression. Marcia provides horticultural therapy using nature-based activities supporting mental health recovery.

    Family therapy sessions weekly address household communication patterns, interaction guidelines, crisis response planning, and treatment participation obstacles. Education department coordinates homebound student status.

    Minimum one-hour daily classroom participation maintains academic progress during treatment. Clinical staff supervision throughout daily programming ensures individualized attention within. appropriate developmental peer settings.

    Advantages of Working with Brightpath for Teen Mental Health Treatment in Hillsborough

    The advantages of working with Brightpath for teen mental health treatment in Hillsborough are highlighted below:

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    Age-Separated Programming Tracks Supporting Developmental Appropriateness

    Programming separates adolescents ages 12-18 into developmental stage-matched treatment tracks. Meadow Track addresses ages 12-15, focusing on middle school social-emotional challenges.

    Summit Track serves ages 15-18, targeting high school developmental concerns. Developmental maturity rather than chronological age alone determines track assignment for 15-year-olds.

    Safe therapeutic environments emerge when teens connect with developmentally similar peers experiencing comparable challenges.

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    Multiple Weekly Admissions with Flexible Daily Scheduling

    Monday, Tuesday, and Thursday admission availability exceeds single weekly admission limitations. Dual daily time slots at 9:00 AM and 10:30 AM provide six weekly admission opportunities.

    Families select admission timing matching teen readiness and logistical requirements. Extended waiting periods between single-day admissions common elsewhere, are eliminated.

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    School Coordination Programming Including Homebound Status

    Education department manages homebound status for PHP students through school partnerships. Michelle directs educational services with MSW credentials and teaching experience.

    Education liaisons coordinate daily assignments and maintain ongoing school communication. One-hour minimum daily classroom time supports academic continuity. Pre-discharge meetings prepare school personnel and teens for attendance resumption.

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    Universal Weekly Psychiatric Provider Consultations

    All teens receive weekly psychiatric provider sessions independent of medication status. Psychiatric Nurse Practitioners or Physician Assistants provide these evaluations.

    Consultations address sleep hygiene, nutritional wellness, and mental health physiological effects beyond medication considerations. CARF standards mandate integrated psychiatric care, preventing insurance fraud through "as needed" service structures.

    Comprehensive biopsychosocial monitoring throughout treatment exceeds medication-only consultation models.

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    DBT-Based Programming with Attachment-Focused Components

    DBT provides the primary therapeutic framework across all treatment tracks. River IOP emphasizes intensive DBT skill acquisition for treatment-naive teens.

    Horizon IOP incorporates attachment-based approaches for PHP graduates or teens with substantial DBT backgrounds. Licensed therapists deliver training in emotional regulation, distress tolerance, interpersonal effectiveness, and mindfulness.

    Attachment-focused Horizon programming maintains PHP skill gains while developing relationship security and connection patterns

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    Structured Family Involvement Throughout Treatment Levels

    PHP families participate in weekly family therapy emphasizing stabilization and communication development. Family therapists address interaction styles, engagement rules, safety protocols, and participation barriers.

    Stabilization receives priority over trauma processing during intensive treatment phases. IOP families receive bi-weekly telephone consultations plus weekly rating form completion.

    Primary therapists provide PHP families weekly progress updates, maintaining consistent parent communication.

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    Customizable Individual Therapy Scheduling

    Weekly 60-minute individual therapy adapts to teen engagement preferences and capabilities. Options include single 60-minute sessions, dual 30-minute sessions, or daily 15-minute meetings.

    This "kid-dependent" flexibility recognizes developmental engagement capacity variations. Total therapy time remains consistent while delivery format accommodates individual needs.

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    Frequent Admission Availability Reducing Wait Times

    Three weekly admission days eliminate single-slot admission limitations. Six weekly admission opportunities through dual Monday, Tuesday, and Thursday time slots exist.

    Extended two-to-four-week waits common with single weekly admissions are avoided. Families achieve admission within days when clinical necessity supports immediate treatment initiation.

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    Streamlined Admission Day Assessment Process

    Single 30-minute integrated assessments include teens, caregivers, primary therapists, and psychiatric providers simultaneously. This eliminates repetitive information sharing across multiple provider meetings.

    Comprehensive information gathering occurs once rather than requiring teens to repeat histories multiple times. Efficient assessment reduces teen frustration while ensuring team-wide information consistency.

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    Specialized Creative Therapy Modalities

    Music and horticultural therapies supplement traditional verbal processing approaches. Hannah delivers music therapy across PHP and IOP tracks, facilitating structured creative expression. Marcia provides nature-based horticultural therapy supporting recovery through experiential learning.

    Weekly curriculum integration ensures diverse therapeutic modality access. Adolescents often engage more authentically through expressive experiential approaches than verbal processing alone.

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    Quality Certification Supporting Insurance Authorization

    CARF accreditation from the Commission on Accreditation of Rehabilitation Facilities demonstrates quality standard commitment. This certification enhances insurance billing capabilities for integrated psychiatric services.

    Intentional admission processes with clinical necessity documentation achieve successful insurance authorizations. Accreditation distinguishes programming from non-certified facilities with limited oversight and coverage acceptance.

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    From First Call to First Day

    1. 1

      Call & Connect

      Reach out by phone, form, or referral.

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    2. 2

      Clinical Review

      Expert eyes assess your teen's needs

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    3. 3

      Teen Assessment

      One-on-one conversation with your teen.

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    4. 4

      First Day of Care

      A carefully orchestrated beginning

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    Bright Path collaborates with leading North Carolina health systems, school districts, and universities, includingBright Path collaborates with leading North Carolina health systems, school districts, and universities, including

    Our Partners

    Brightpath is Led by Clinicians Who Are Both Skilled And Deeply Human

    Our team includes licensed therapists, psychiatrists, and educators — all passionate about adolescent mental health.

    Shantel Sullivan

    Shantel Sullivan - Chief Executive Officer

    Dr. Sullivan brings extensive experience to her role as Bright Path’s Chief Executive Officer. She has been a clinical leader in residential adolescent treatment, adult outpatient services, and academia. With more than a decade of experience as a licensed social worker in New York and North Carolina, Dr. Sullivan has collaborated broadly with individuals, families, and the community. Dr. Sullivan earned a Bachelor of Arts in sociology from the State University of New York at Potsdam in 2006, a Master’s Degree in Social Work (MSW), and a graduate certificate in addictions counseling in 2008 from the University of New England. She went on to complete a doctoral degree in Educational Leadership with a concentration in transformational leadership also from the University of New England in Portland, Maine in 2017. She served as a faculty member for the State of New York Office of Alcoholism and Substance Abuse Services Bureau of Workforce Development where she provided regional education on adolescent co-occurring disorders. She moved to North Carolina in 2016 to work in academia as an assistant professor of social work at Western Carolina University. In 2020, she moved to Raleigh to be closer to family and became an adjunct professor at North Carolina State University School of Social Work, where she still teaches part-time. She is a seasoned national speaker, social worker instructor, clinical field instructor, and member of the National Association of Social Workers. In addition to Dr Sullivans clinical work, she edits all of the content on the Bright Path Teen Mental Health Blog to ensure accuracy and accessibility to all of our readers. Dr. Sullivan is committed to increasing access to evidence-based, compassionate, mental health care for adolescents. She further understands the challenges ALL members of a family experience when their loved one is suffering.

    Adrianne Mowatt

    Adrianne Mowatt - Mental Health Technician

    Jennifer is a licensed and nationally board-certified psychiatric mental health nurse practitioner who provides psychiatric care including assessment, diagnoses, medication management, and therapeutic treatment for teens admitted to PHP programming. She is a graduate of Duke University with a Master of Science in Nursing, with 13 years experience in health care including but not limited to pediatric inpatient psychiatry and perinatal care. Jennifer believes in patient and family-centered health care, collaboration, and integrative care. She is passionate about spreading access to quality mental health care and responding to mental health crises with effective treatment, empathy, and support. In her free time, Jennifer enjoys crafting with her children, also she loves to create a comfortable and relaxing space in her office at Bright Path!


    Abigail Krieck

    Abigail Krieck - Director of Strategic Impact and Outreach

    Dedicated to the cause of mental health and well-being, Abigail is a compassionate Clinical Outreach Specialist at Bright Path Behavioral Health. She plays a pivotal role in bringing support, hope, and healing to individuals and communities in need.

    With 10 years of experience in mental health, Abigail is an advocate for those who may otherwise go unnoticed. Her work as a Clinical Outreach Specialist revolves around ensuring that no one is left behind, that everyone has access to the resources and care they deserve.

    At Bright Path Behavioral Health, Abigail plays a central role in connecting individuals to the vital services they require when stepping down from programming. She specializes in community engagement, and is known for resource coordination that bridges the gap between need and assistance.

    Abigail is committed to fostering partnerships and collaboration within the community. She actively engages in other mental health providers and programs, schools, youth groups, government agencies, and extracurricular programs, working tirelessly to expand access to mental health support.

    Abigail holds her role at Bright Path Behavioral Health with distinction, ensuring that the program’s mission of making quality mental health treatment accessible is realized every day. She is instrumental in breaking down the barriers and stigma associated with mental health, making it easier for individuals to seek help when they need it.

    Outside of her role at Bright Path, Abgail enjoys hiking with her dogs, cooking, baking, and raising carnivorous plants, which provide a well-deserved break and contribute to her own mental well-being.

    Abigail is driven by the belief that everyone should have the opportunity to lead a mentally healthy life. As a Clinical Outreach Specialist, she embodies this principle and works tirelessly to ensure that help is just a call or conversation away.

    Jalecia Beatty

    Jalecia Beatty - Music Therapist

    Jalecia is a licensed clinical mental health counselor associate (LCMHCA) and serves as the Clinical Director. She started at Bright Path as a graduate student intern and is an instrumental part of the program’s growth and development.

    Jalecia attended East Carolina University for undergraduate and graduate studies; and has a Bachelor of Science in Nutrition with a concentration in science, and a master’s in clinical counseling in mental health and substance abuse.

    She is passionate about expanding access to intensive and quality mental health care for adolescents. As someone who has navigated their own journey towards healing and self-acceptance, she personally knows how important it is to have a safe space during your healing journey and how limited the options are for teens. It’s her goal, as one of the psychotherapists and as the PHP program manager, to provide that for teens who are struggling as well as work towards increasing the resources that are available.

    In her free time, she loves traveling and spending time watching Supernatural with her dogs!

    Camille Tate

    Camille Tate - Admissions Coordinator

    Camille holds a Master of Social Work from North Carolina State University. She worked as a case manager and counselor to adults struggling with trauma and substance misuse for three years in Washington, D.C. before returning to North Carolina in 2021.

    Prior to joining the Bright Path team, Camille worked at a software company, supporting non-profits in improving their client data management systems.As Bright Path’s Admissions Coordinator, Camille brings a passion for strengths-based approaches to care and uses her clinical background to help guide families through the often-stressful process of finding quality mental health care for their teenaged children.

    Camille considers herself a fierce advocate for kids and aspires to live in a world where all young people and their families receive support and skills for managing their overall social-emotional wellbeing.Camille takes care of her own wellbeing by making art with lots of glitter, singing at the top of lungs with her ragtag musical group, The Low Down No Pressure Mediocre Music Band, attending a weekly support group, spending time outside, and cuddling up with her cats and partner.

    Ari D’Alessandro

    Ari D’Alessandro - Teen Care Advocate

    Ari graduated from NC State in 2024 with a B.A. in psychology and minors in philosophy, cognitive science, and dance. She spent two years working as a research assistant with a focus on ethics of transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) and serves as an editorial intern for the American Journal of Bioethics Neuroscience. She has also volunteered as a crisis counselor with Crisis Text line since 2021, which sparked her interest in crisis intervention and providing empathetic mental health care to those in need.

    Ari is enthusiastic about providing empowering mental health care to teens and young adults, particularly through teaching dialectical behavior therapy (DBT) skills, and is interested in the application of creative therapies, such as dance movement therapy (DMT). She hopes to pursue a Ph.D. in clinical psychology with an interdisciplinary research focus on personality disorders and the development of novel personality assessments at the intersection of psychology and philosophy. In her free time, Ari enjoys writing, dancing, and spending time with friends.

     Michele Jones

    Michele Jones - Education Liaison

    Michele is a native of Fayetteville N. C. Ms. She attended and graduated from Hampton University with a bachelor’s in social work (BSW). Working in various positions before settling in New York to work for a Non-Profit Foster Care Agency as a Social Worker, where she learned of her love for working with adolescents and their families. Ms. Jones then decided to further her education to learn how to effectively help individuals and families deal with the many struggles they faced and went on to earn a master’s degree in social work (MSW) from Hunter College School of Social Work.

    Upon moving back to North Carolina and continuing to work with young people as a North Carolina Board Certified Special Education Master Teacher. Ms. Jones taught in North Carolina Public Schools for 18 years as a Special Education Teacher for students with various Learning Disabilities at the Elementary and High School level.

    She believes students must be healthy to be educated and educated to be healthy. She uses a collaborative approach and various treatment modalities that have helped strengthen family units, also identifying and treating the core of any diagnosis or issue is essential when working with individuals.

    In her spare time, Ms. Jones enjoys spending time with her family and friends, traveling, and enjoying her happy place, the North Carolina Beaches.

    Hillsborough Teen Mental Health Treatment Center Reviews

    Trust in our teen mental health facilities emerges from adolescent, family, school, and referring clinician positive experiences

    review-avatar

    Scout O’Brien

    This place is awesome!!!! From my experience as a patient here, all the staff are really kind and patient and have helped me through my crisis and my therapy journey. They also have snacks!!! I highly recommend this place for anyone who needs it. :D

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    10 months ago
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    Ben Pfotenhauer

    Bright Path Behavioral Health offers exceptional anxiety treatment for teens in Wake Forest. Their tailored treatment plans and compassionate staff helped my teen manage their anxiety effectively. Highly recommend their comprehensive approach to anxiety treatment!

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    11 months ago
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    John Doe

    Ride The Wave!
    - Tony

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    a year ago
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    CROAXER

    Changed my life forever. Put me on a Brightpath :)

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    a year ago
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    Lesley Ireland

    I don’t typically leave reviews but I do not want any other child or family to struggle when there is an amazing resource like Bright Path in our community. My daughter is still a patient in the PHP and has also been in the IOP. I can’t say enough wonderful things about the program, the staff and most importantly, the significant improvement in my daughter’s symptoms. It is not an exaggeration when I say she is a different person and for the better. She was suffering with symptoms she didn’t understand and the team at Bright Path has given her the tools to continue her mental health self care throughout her life. I wish every teen had this opportunity. I can’t thank BP enough and I wish I could give a million stars rather than 5!

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    a year ago
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    K Farnsworth

    My child went through the PHP program and it was a major turning point in their recovery. It was Bright Path or residential, and having that option for PHP at a place that felt safe with practitioners who truly care was a godsend. I can’t say enough good things about how my child did. The bonus was that my child also liked going! They made some true friends there.

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    a year ago
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    Tiffany Munro

    I can't say enough good things about Bright Path. They are so different than other PHPs in the Raleigh area. The staff genuinely cares about the clients and their families. From intake to graduation from the program we felt care and professionalism every step of the way. Positive attitudes, willingness to look deeper into issues, communication is excellent, and always willing to listen to find solutions or just be the support we needed. I wish they could train other PHPs in the state, because they are doing it the right way.

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    a year ago

    Hillsborough Teen Mental Health Treatment FAQ

    Orange County has approximately 2,200 residents aged 3-17 currently receiving mental health treatment through Cardinal Innovations. Mental health emergency visits for youth ages 0-24 increased 51% between 2009 and 2015. Depression affects 128,000 North Carolina adolescents ages 12-17 statewide, with 53.2% receiving no mental health care annually.

    Seven in ten youth nationally in juvenile justice systems have mental health conditions. Orange County data shows 41% of adjudicated youth need mental health assessment, exceeding the state average by 9%. Early intervention prevents justice system involvement for at-risk teens throughout Orange County.

    Treatment becomes necessary when symptoms persist despite outpatient care or functioning declines across multiple domains. Suicidal ideation, self-harm, or recent psychiatric hospitalization indicate PHP-level necessity. School refusal, family relationship breakdown, or peer isolation suggest intensive treatment requirements. Trailhead Check-In screening determines appropriate treatment intensity.

    North Carolina regulations govern confidentiality. Teens participate in private assessments, allowing sensitive disclosure. Therapists share progress information with parents through weekly PHP or bi-weekly IOP updates. Safety concerns, including suicidal ideation, self-harm, or danger to others, require disclosure. Session content remains confidential.

    PHP students receive homebound status, eliminating absence penalties. Education liaisons coordinate daily with Orange County Schools and Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools. One-hour minimum daily classroom time maintains academic continuity. Pre-discharge meetings prepare school personnel for attendance resumption.

    Psychiatric Nurse Practitioners and Physician Assistants provide medication evaluation when clinically appropriate. All teens receive weekly psychiatric sessions regardless of medication status. Medication remains optional. Teen-centered symptom targeting guides medication decisions. New medications rarely start on admission day.

    Developmental track separation by age (12-15 and 15-18) ensures appropriate peer grouping. Three weekly admission days with dual time slots eliminate extended waits. Integrated admission assessment prevents repetitive information gathering. Orange County location addresses transportation barriers identified as the #2 gap in local mental health access.

    PHP families receive weekly family therapy. IOP families receive bi-weekly phone consultations and complete weekly rating forms. Parents attend integrated admission assessments. Primary therapists provide PHP families weekly updates. Parents sign admission-day safety plans.

    Parents bring teens to screening despite resistance. Developmentally appropriate communication reduces power dynamics. Many resistant teens engage after meeting staff and peers. Parents can require participation for minors under guardianship. Collaborative approaches convert resistance into engagement.

    Social prescribing addresses teen priorities. Traditional referrals connect teens with outpatient therapists and medication managers. Social prescriptions include community activities like music clubs and art groups. Education department coordinates school re-entry meetings. PHP graduates may transition to Horizon IOP

    Costs vary by insurance coverage and program intensity. CARF accreditation supports comprehensive insurance billing. Intentional admission processes achieve authorization success. Admissions team provides free insurance verification, explaining benefits, coverage, and family responsibility before treatment. Orange County's #1 mental health access barrier is affordability; we work to maximize insurance coverage.

    Teens with ADHD receive treatment when mental health symptoms represent primary focus. Autism spectrum teens participate when social-emotional challenges represent primary needs. Clinical director reviews assessments, ensuring presentation-programming match.

    Teen-centered philosophy creates affirming environments. Identity development receives priority. Psychiatric provider reduces power dynamics, creating collaborative relationships. Group therapy provides supportive peer environments for authentic expression. LGBTQ+ identity receives recognition as normal human development.

    Both locations offer identical programming and maintain CARF accreditation. Hillsborough location addresses Orange County's #2 mental health access barrier: transportation and location. Services are especially scarce in northern Orange County; our Hillsborough facility provides local access for Chapel Hill, Durham, Carrboro, Mebane, and Burlington families.

    Teen Mental Health Insurance Providers We Work with in Hillsborough

    The major teen mental health insurance providers we work with in Hillsborough, NC include the following:

    We Serve Teen Mental Health Clients Throughout Orange County and the Greater Hillsborough Area

    Hillsborough and Wake Forest locations maintain identical CARF accreditation and North Carolina state licensing, providing equivalent quality. Both facilities offer Summit Track PHP (ages 15-18), Meadow Track PHP (ages 12-15), River IOP (introductory DBT), and Horizon IOP (skill maintenance)

    Hillsborough

    Chapel Hill, Durham, Carrboro, Mebane, Burlington, and Orange County communities receive services from our Hillsborough location. Orange County Chamber of Commerce membership reflects local family and community partnership commitment. Northern Research Triangle and Piedmont region families access the Hillsborough facility throughout central North Carolina.

    Virtual treatment option

    HIPAA-compliant telehealth platform provides comprehensive virtual treatment serving families statewide regardless of location. Virtual programming offers identical therapeutic content and clinical supervision as in-person services. Transportation barriers for rural families or mobility-limited individuals are eliminated.

    Take a Tour of Our Teen Mental Health Facility in Hillsborough, NC

    Developmentally appropriate therapeutic environments at Hillsborough support adolescent mental health treatment. Summit and Meadow tracks maintain distinct group therapy room spaces for age-separated programming. Comfortable non-clinical atmosphere reduces institutional feelings common in hospital-based settings.

    Private confidential individual therapy offices accommodate weekly primary therapist counseling sessions. Structured 60-minute weekly therapy adapts to teen preferences through single sessions, dual 30-minute sessions, or daily 15-minute meetings. Varied adolescent communication styles and attention spans receive accommodation.

    Daily one-hour educational programming for PHP homebound students occurs in classroom spaces. Education liaisons coordinate with schools, ensuring assignment completion and academic continuity. Therapeutic environment balances with academic functionality, supporting learning during treatment.

    Music therapy with Hannah and horticultural therapy with Marcia occur in creative therapy spaces. Experiential learning beyond traditional talk therapy receives specialized space support. Adolescents engage authentically through diverse modalities, including artistic and nature-based interventions.

    Behavior Bingo prize drawing rewards utilize common areas. Chick-Fil-A lunch and lunch-period movie viewing constitute popular rewards. Behavioral systems support positive peer culture and treatment engagement through valued concrete incentives.

    Clear backpack and clear water bottle policies demonstrate safety and supervision commitment. Transparent materials allow appropriate oversight while respecting teen autonomy and dignity. Teen-centered treatment philosophy maintains respect throughout programming despite supervision necessities.

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    Mental Health Conditions We Treat in Hillsborough

    Adolescent Depression Treatment, Teen Anxiety Treatment, Trauma Therapy for Teens, Self-Harm Treatment for Adolescents, Suicidal Ideation Treatment

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    Adolescent Depression Treatment

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    Teen Anxiety Treatment

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    Trauma Therapy for Teens

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    Self-Harm Treatment for Adolescents

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    Suicidal Ideation Treatment

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    Licenses, Accreditations, and Awards

    Include trust logo badges for CARF, NAMI, and the North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services.