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About Center for Discovery Austin
Center for Discovery Austin provides outpatient eating disorder treatment for adolescents (age 10+) and adults of all genders. This facility opened in July 2018 and offers intensive outpatient (IOP) and partial hospitalization (PHP) programs. Treatment methods include eye movement desensitization and reprocessing (EMDR) therapy, motivational interviewing, trauma-informed care, cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), and dialectical behavior therapy (DBT). Discovery’s specialized binge eating disorder (BED) program, Path to Peace, is also offered at this location.
Center for Discovery believes in establishing “connection over correction.” Their inclusive community spaces foster safety and vulnerability for patients who struggle with bingeing and chronic dieting. The Path to Peace program is designed to honor the unique nuances of bingeing and the deceptiveness of diet culture. The trauma-attuned program’s core tenets include representation and belonging, shame resilience, and weight-neutral care.
PHP falls on the continuum of mental healthcare between residential and outpatient treatment. Center for Discovery offers both adolescent and adult PHP options. The treatment team includes dietitians, psychiatrists, and counselors. The program involves individual, family and group counseling, as well as medication management, nutritional counseling and meal supervision. PHP meets 5-6 days a week, but participants go home each day to the comfort of their own beds. This allows clients to receive much of the same structure as residential care during the day, with the opportunity to begin practicing new skills as they transition to life outside the treatment program.
Patients will eat and be provided one or two meals/snacks at the facility for hands-on support and some meals/snacks will be eaten at home. This provides patients with the space to practice and implement the skills learned while in the program. Center for Discovery provides free in-person eating disorder support groups every Thursday evening, as well as free online support groups.
IOP treatment is a lower level of care that does not require hospitalization, around the clock monitoring, or overnight stays, and is usually part of a step-down approach from residential or PHP treatment. IOP requires individuals to obtain at least 9 hours of group and/or individual therapy per week, which is divided up into 3-hour sessions 3 to 5 evenings a week, or on weekends, for 12-16 weeks. The goal of IOP is to allow clients to shift the majority of their time and focus back to life outside of treatment, using IOP to continue the work on those areas where they need additional therapy or skills practice. In IOP, meals are eaten outside of the program.
Center for Discovery is in-network with all major insurance companies and provides complimentary benefit verification.
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Insurance Accepted
Provider's Policy:Center for Discovery is a preferred provider with most major insurance companies.
Adolescents
Teens receive the treatment they need for mental health disorders and addiction, with the added support of educational and vocational services.
Men and Women
Men and women attend treatment for addiction in a co-ed setting, going to therapy groups together to share experiences, struggles, and successes.
Eating Disorders
An eating disorder is a long-term pattern of unhealthy behavior relating to food. Most people with eating disorders have a distorted self-image.
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Evidence-Based
A combination of scientifically rooted therapies and treatments make up evidence-based care, defined by their measured and proven results.
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Group Therapy
Two or more people meet with a therapist together. Patients get valuable peer support, strengthen interpersonal skills, and improve self-awareness.
Individual Treatment
Individual care meets the needs of each patient, using personalized treatment to provide them the most relevant care and greatest chance of success.
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Eye Movement Therapy (EMDR)
Lateral, guided eye movements help reduce the emotional reactions of retelling and reprocessing trauma, allowing intense feelings to dissipate.
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Motivational Interviewing
Based on the idea that motivation to change comes from within, providers use a conversational framework to discover personalized methods for change.
Eating Disorders
An eating disorder is a long-term pattern of unhealthy behavior relating to food. Most people with eating disorders have a distorted self-image.
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Co-Occurring Disorders
A person with multiple mental health diagnoses, such as addiction and depression, has co-occurring disorders also called dual diagnosis.
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