Virtual Intensive Outpatient Program (IOP) for Teens

Virtual Intensive Outpatient Program for teens provides structured therapeutic care for adolescents ages 12-18 experiencing mental health challenges requiring support beyond weekly outpatient therapy. Bright Path delivers Virtual IOP services through programs developed by licensed marriage and family therapists, emphasizing collaborative treatment relationships. Clinical approach centers on working with teens rather than on teens throughout therapeutic programming.

North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services, under the Division of Health Service regulation issued state licensing authorizing operations. License 27G5400 permits day activity for individuals of all disability groups. Commission on Accreditation of Rehabilitation Facilities granted CARF accreditation, validating comprehensive quality standards. Virtual IOP operates statewide through HIPAA-compliant telehealth, plus in-person options at Wake Forest and Hillsborough locations for families preferring on-site services.

Virtual IOP offers two distinct tracks serving different clinical populations and treatment needs. Virtual Path addresses teens entering intensive treatment with minimal prior DBT experience. Horizon Path serves adolescents stepping down from PHP or possessing extensive DBT backgrounds requiring skill maintenance. Track assignment occurs through clinical assessment, determining appropriate therapeutic focus.

Dialectical Behavior Therapy throughout Virtual IOP strengthens emotional regulation and distress tolerance capabilities. Attachment-based therapy addresses relationship patterns and secure connection development during Horizon programming. Psychiatric Nurse Practitioners and Physician Assistants evaluate every teen weekly regardless of medication involvement throughout Virtual IOP.

Virtual delivery provides statewide access, eliminating geographic barriers. Wake Forest location at 203 Capcom Ave, Suite 104, and Hillsborough facility available for families preferring in-person services.

Depression affects 128,000 North Carolina adolescents ages 12-17, with only 46.8% receiving mental health services. Thirty-nine percent of North Carolina high school students reported persistent sadness or hopelessness in 2023. Virtual IOP-level intervention prevents crisis escalation requiring PHP or hospitalization.

  • Flexible therapeutic structure maintaining school attendance
  • Evidence-based DBT curriculum through 7-week Virtual rotations
  • Attachment-focused Horizon programming for skill maintenance
  • Weekly psychiatric provider evaluations for all participants
  • Tuesday-Wednesday-Thursday schedule at 3:30pm-6:30pm
  • Clinical needs-based track assignment (Virtual/Horizon)
  • Age-separated programming preventing inappropriate peer mixing
  • Bi-weekly parent consultations maintaining family involvement
  • School coordination supporting continued academic attendance
  • Weekly parent rating forms tracking progress perspectives
  • Music therapy integration providing creative expression
  • Horticultural therapy supporting nature-based recovery
  • CARF-accredited quality ensuring insurance coverage
  • North Carolina state-licensed facility operations
  • Statewide virtual access eliminating transportation barriers

    Virtual Intensive Outpatient Program (VIOP)

    Bright Path's virtual intensive outpatient program in North Carolina includes the following:

    Programs

    Virtual Path: Your First IOP Experience

    Description

    Virtual IOP The same teen-centered, evidence-based care as our in-person programs, delivered through a secure interactive telehealth platform for teens across North Carolina. Three afternoons a week, teens show up to a virtual space that was built for how they actually engage online — not just a video call with a shared screen.

    What to Expect

    Virtual Path participants engage in 7-week curriculum rotations that establish comprehensive DBT foundations. You'll master skills like STOP technique, TIPP for crisis moments, IMPROVE the moment, ACCEPTS for distraction, checking the facts, opposite action, and riding the wave of emotions.

    Individual therapy happens weekly with your primary therapist who stays with you throughout treatment. We'll structure sessions based on what works for you—whether that's one 60-minute session, two 30-minute sessions, or daily 15-minute check-ins. Psychiatric provider consultations happen weekly to address sleep hygiene, nutrition, wellness, and medication appropriateness if relevant.

    Creative expression components make the work engaging beyond just talking. Our music therapist facilitates creative emotional expression through structured musical interventions. Our horticulture therapist supports recovery through nature-based experiential learning.

    Your parents stay involved through bi-weekly phone consultations with your therapist. They also complete weekly rating forms to track how things are going at home. Licensed clinical staff facilitate all virtual programming, ensuring you get therapeutic support that's just the right intensity.

    Advantages of Working with Bright Path for Virtual Intensive Outpatient Program in North Carolina

    The advantages of working with Bright Path's Virtual Intensive Outpatient Program for teen mental health treatment in North Carolina are listed below:

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    Built for the World Teens Live In

    Today’s teens are tomorrow’s engineers, coders, designers, and innovators. It makes sense that many feel comfortable—and even confident—online. We meet them in a space where they already navigate, communicate, and connect, and we use that familiarity to build trust and momentum.

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    More Than a Zoom Link

    Bright Path VIOP is a thoughtfully constructed digital environment. Our therapists understand online culture because many of them grew up in it. They bring that lived understanding into how they design content—making sessions interactive, engaging, and responsive to how teens actually experience the digital world.

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    Fully Virtual by Design

    This isn’t a camera in the back of a room. Everyone—teens and therapists alike—is fully virtual. That means no side conversations, no audio confusion, no feeling like an afterthought to an in-person group. The experience is cohesive, intentional, and created specifically for the virtual space.

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    Honest About the Limits of Screens

    We don’t ignore the realities of virtual life—we name them. In VIOP, therapists model eye breaks, stretching, stepping outside, petting the dog, and moving the body. We intentionally build in moments to reset and then process the impact in real time. Teens learn how to use technology without being consumed by it.

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    A Bridge, Not a Barrier

    For teens navigating agoraphobia, school refusal, or separation anxiety, VIOP can be a powerful starting point. It allows them to build rapport and safety with Bright Path from home. For many, it becomes a bridge to in-person services—expanding their world at a pace that feels manageable and supported.

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    Local, Accountable, and Actually Here

    A lot of virtual mental health programs are national platforms — large, far-reaching, and built to scale. Bright Path is a North Carolina program with real locations, real community roots, and real people who answer the phone. When something comes up — and something always comes up — you're not navigating a national call center. You're talking to someone who knows your teen's name.

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    Your Parents Get Support Too: Bi-Weekly Check-ins and Progress Tracking

    Virtual IOP families participate in bi-weekly phone consultations, maintaining strong parent-therapist communication. Weekly parent rating forms track family perspectives on teen progress and functioning at home. This structured family involvement supports treatment without overwhelming everyone with constant meetings. Parent communication maintains family engagement that's appropriate for Virtual IOP intensity level.

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    Therapy That Works for How Your Brain Works: Flexible Session Options

    Virtual IOP provides 60 minutes of weekly individual therapy structured according to your preferences and attention capacity. Choose from single 60-minute sessions, two 30-minute sessions, or 15-minute daily check-ins. This "teen-dependent" flexibility recognizes that different brains engage differently. Your total therapy time stays consistent while the delivery format adapts to what actually helps you focus and connect.

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    You Don't Have to Wait Forever: Multiple Weekly Admission Days

    Virtual IOP admits new teens multiple times each week rather than forcing everyone to wait for limited admission slots. This schedule provides more opportunities to start when you're ready. This frequent Virtual IOP admission availability eliminates the two-to-four-week waits common at other programs. Families can access Virtual IOP within days when clinical necessity supports intervention.

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    Tell Your Story Once: Integrated Assessment That Makes Sense

    Virtual IOP conducts single 30-minute integrated assessments including teens, caregivers, primary therapists, and psychiatric providers all together. This integrated approach eliminates the exhausting process of repeating your story to multiple people in multiple meetings. Comprehensive information collection happens once, respecting your time and energy. Efficient Virtual IOP assessment reduces teen frustration while ensuring everyone on your team has the same information.

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    More Than Just Talking: Creative and Expressive Therapy Integration

    Virtual IOP programming integrates music therapy and horticultural therapy beyond traditional talk therapy. Our music therapist provides music therapy throughout Virtual IOP, facilitating creative expression through structured interventions that help you process what's hard to say. Our horticulture therapist delivers horticultural therapy within Virtual IOP, supporting recovery through nature-based experiential learning that gets you out of your head. Our Virtual IOP schedule includes creative expression because we know adolescents engage authentically through diverse ways of connecting and healing.

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    Quality You Can Trust: CARF Accreditation and North Carolina State Licensing

    CARF accreditation demonstrates Bright Path Virtual IOP's commitment to comprehensive quality standards that protect teens and families. North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services licensing ensures regulatory compliance and ethical operations. This accreditation supports robust insurance billing capabilities, ensuring Virtual IOP coverage when you need it. Our intentional admission processes with solid clinical necessity documentation achieve authorization success.

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    Geography Doesn't Matter: Statewide Access That Eliminates Barriers

    Virtual delivery eliminates geographic barriers for families throughout North Carolina. Rural communities access identical therapeutic content without multi-hour drives that exhaust families. Transportation challenges, mobility limitations, and scheduling conflicts resolve through secure virtual participation. Our HIPAA-compliant telehealth infrastructure provides safe, accessible treatment statewide.

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    From First Call to First Day

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      Contact Us

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    2. 2

      Trailhead Check-In

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    3. 3

      Clinical Review

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    4. 4

      First Day of Care

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

    Bright Path is led by a Team Who is Both Skilled And Deeply Human

    Bright Path’s teams includes licensed therapists, psychiatry providers, educators, and other professionals who are both skilled and 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. Sullivan's 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.

    Jennifer Hoffman

    Jennifer Hoffman - Psychiatric Nurse Practitioner

    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 of 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. She also 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, Abigail 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 - Regional Clinical Director

    Jalecia is a licensed clinical mental health counselor associate (LCMHC) 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!

    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.

    North Carolina Teen Mental Health Treatment Center Reviews

    Choosing a virtual intensive outpatient program in North Carolina means evaluating how well teens actually learn skills, whether families feel supported, how programs work with schools, and whether referring clinicians trust the treatment quality.

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    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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    North Carolina Virtual Intensive Outpatient Program FAQ

    Virtual IOP treatment is 7 weeks. Clinical necessity determines program extensions when needed. Our seven-week curriculum ensures teens learn coping strategies, engage in psychoeducation groups, and have peer support while at home.

    Virtual IOP operates Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday from 3:30 pm-6:30 pm, accommodating school attendance and daily activities. Teens will participate in three groups each day while in virtual IOP.

    Absolutely—school attendance continues throughout Virtual IOP participation. Our flexible Virtual IOP scheduling specifically accommodates regular academic hours without disruption.

    Just like in-person treatment, cost depends on your specific insurance carrier and where you are in your plan — so there's no one-size-fits-all number we can give you that would actually mean anything.

    What we can tell you is that our team handles all the insurance verification and billing advocacy on your behalf, so you're not left navigating that alone. The best first step is simply reaching out — we'll take it from there.

    Yes.

    Virtual IOP requires a reliable internet connection, webcam-enabled device (computer, tablet, or smartphone), and private space for participation. Our HIPAA-compliant telehealth platform ensures confidential therapeutic engagement.

    Virtual IOP provides teens that have limited access to treatment the opprounity to recieve support. Many teens that particiapte in Virtual IOP live in rural areas that do not have in-person treatment. Virtual IOP also allows families with transportation or scheduling barriers to still connect their teen with resources.

    Caregivers participate in weekly check-ins with their teen's primary therapist. The goal of Caregivers can also participate in the Caregiver Support Groups offered throughout the week.

    Comprehensive aftercare planning occurs while your teen is in Virtual IOP weeks using our social prescribing approach—connecting you with activities and supports that match your interests. Social prescriptions include community activities like music clubs, art groups, and Boys and Girls Club programs that keep you connected. Traditional referrals connect teens with outpatient therapists and psychiatric providers for medication management continuity throughout North Carolina when needed.

    Virtual IOP serves adolescents experiencing mental health challenges that need more support than weekly outpatient therapy can provide. Symptoms may include teens experiencing depression, anxiety and mood disorders. Teens that are in need of coping skills with limited access to services in their area make up the Virtual IOP cohort.

    At Bright Path, each of our programs are intentionally designed and developmentally appropriate for teens 12-18. We have and will always be a teen-exclusive program. We are one of the few treatment options in North Carolina that is exclusively for teens.

    Virtual IOP provides structured therapeutic support that can prevent crisis escalation. Early intervention through Virtual IOP addresses emerging symptoms before acute presentations develop. While Bright Path works closely with your teen, we cannot guarantee that participating in Virtual IOP will prevent hospitalization. On occasion, teens provide more information about the severity of their symptoms which may lead to your teens therapist recommending participation in PHP and less frequently being referred to the hospital.

    Bright Path recognizes that in-person can feel different from virtual services. Bright Path does not pretend that in-person and virtual are identical. Virtual IOP aims to provide therapeutic support, with the same quality standards, to teens who are unable to attend in-person IOP.

    Teen Mental Health Insurance Providers We Work with for North Carolina Virtual IOP

    The primary Virtual IOP teen mental health insurance providers Bright Path works with in North Carolina are highlighted below:

    We Serve Virtual Intensive Outpatient Program Clients Throughout North Carolina

    Virtual delivery through HIPAA-compliant telehealth serves families statewide, eliminating geographic barriers. In-person options available at Wake Forest and Hillsborough locations for families preferring on-site services.

    Wake Forest In-Person Option (Optional)

    Wake Forest location at 203 Capcom Ave, Suite 104, Wake Forest, North Carolina 27587, available for families preferring in-person services. Raleigh, Durham, Cary, Chapel Hill, Apex, Holly Springs, Garner, Clayton, Knightdale, and Wake County residents have convenient local access. Our Wake Forest Chamber membership demonstrates regional partnership commitment.

    Hillsborough In-Person Option (Optional)

    Hillsborough location available for Chapel Hill, Durham, Carrboro, Mebane, Burlington, and Orange County populations preferring on-site services. Our Orange County Chamber membership reflects local collaborative engagement. Northern Triangle and Piedmont families can access our Hillsborough facility when virtual participation isn't the right fit.

    Experience Our North Carolina Virtual Teen Mental Health Services

    Our North Carolina Virtual IOP services provide developmentally appropriate therapeutic environments through secure telehealth delivery. Virtual and Horizon paths utilize virtual group spaces for therapeutic skill-building sessions that actually engage teenagers. Our professional, HIPAA-compliant virtual platform promotes therapeutic engagement and meaningful participation from the comfort of home.

    Private virtual therapy sessions accommodate weekly individual meetings with your assigned primary therapist who gets to know you throughout treatment. Sixty-minute weekly therapy can be customized to your preferences across varied format configurations. Communication style differences and attention capacity variations receive accommodation through virtual delivery that meets you where you are.

    Flexible virtual scheduling permits after-school participation, preserving academic involvement and social connections that matter to you. Programming balance maintains therapeutic intervention alongside normal adolescent activities. Community integration emphasis throughout Virtual IOP supports real-world skill application where you actually live your life.

    Creative therapy components integrate within virtual programming, including music and horticultural sessions that engage your whole self. Our music therapist facilitates virtual musical interventions supporting emotional expression that goes beyond words. Our horticulture therapist guides nature-based activities promoting wellness through outdoor engagement adapted for virtual participation. Multiple ways to process and heal beyond just talking enhance authentic engagement.

    Virtual group spaces provide peer interaction opportunities through secure video conferencing, fostering therapeutic community bonds with teens who understand what you're going through. Age-appropriate behavioral incentive systems encourage positive participation without feeling childish. Community emphasis assists healthy peer relationship development through meaningful virtual connection.

    Technology requirements remain minimal—reliable internet, webcam, and private space. Clear participation expectations demonstrate safety prioritization while respecting teen autonomy and dignity. Our teen-centered philosophy maintains respect throughout virtual programming delivery.

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    Mental Health Conditions We Treat in North Carolina Virtual IOP

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

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    Depression

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    Anxiety

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    Self-Harm

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    Suicidal Ideation

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    Co-occurring Disorders with Primary Mental Health Presenting Symptoms

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    Licenses, Accreditations, and Awards