Family Self Help Center Lafayette House
Family Self Help Center Lafayette House
Family Self Help Center Lafayette House
About Family Self Help Center Lafayette House
Lafayette House is an outpatient center in Neosho, Newton County, Missouri, providing compassionate care for individuals and families dealing with substance use, domestic violence and sexual assault. The center is located at downtown Neosho, offering clients a safe and warm space to start their healing journey. This outpatient center of the Lafayette House serves adults, children and families ensuring everyone has access to supportive and trauma-informed services.
Finding Comprehensive Support And Healing
The center provides a variety of healing programs designed to support individuals needing comprehensive counseling for substance use, guidance for those dealing with domestic violence and recovery support for those experiencing trauma, anxiety and post traumatic stress (PTSD). Clients take part in individual or group sessions, participate in family counseling, and connect with helpful community resources. Evidence-based therapies help clients process emotions, develop coping skills, build confidence in facing challenges effectively.
Empowering Women And Families
At this center, women and their children are given priority, receiving specialized services that support their healing needs. A case manager helps families connect with local support services and provides onsite childcare to keep clients focus on their treatment. Services like medication-assisted treatment (MAT) is combined with comprehensive counseling and recovery programs to ensure stability, long-term and successful recovery. The clinic also makes referrals to residential facilities if clients and their families need higher level of care. Every client is valued, respected and will never be on their own as they heal at the Lafayette House.

Center Overview

Supportive Medication for Recovery
Medication-Assisted Treatment (MAT) is an evidence-based approach that pairs FDA-approved medications with counseling to treat addiction. The medications are used to reduce cravings, ease withdrawal symptoms, or block the effects of substances. More about MAT
Methadone
Naltrexone
Buprenorphine
Note: Treatment centers offer different forms of MAT—such as oral tablets, dissolvable films, or monthly injections—and their policies can vary based on state regulations, provider preferences, and insurance coverage. Because of these differences, it's best to contact the center directly to learn what options are available and what might be right for your situation.






