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Levels of Care

Intensive Outpatient Program (IOP) for Dual Diagnosis

A dual diagnosis Intensive Outpatient Program (IOP) provides several hours of structured group and individual therapy each week, giving people the flexibility to keep working or attending school while still getting substantial clinical support.

Flexible outpatient therapy session for dual diagnosis treatment

How IOP Fits Into a Treatment Plan

IOP is often used as a step-down after residential or PHP treatment, or as a starting point for people whose co-occurring symptoms are manageable without a higher level of care. Sessions usually total nine to twelve hours a week, spread across a few days.

What Sessions Typically Include

  • Group therapy focused on both mental health and substance use topics
  • Individual therapy check-ins
  • Psychiatric medication management as needed
  • Relapse-prevention and life-skills planning

Insurance for IOP

IOP is generally one of the more accessible levels of care from an insurance standpoint, with fewer prior authorization requirements than residential or PHP care in many plans.

Verify IOP Coverage

Check what your plan covers for intensive outpatient dual diagnosis treatment.

Frequently Asked Questions

How is IOP different from standard outpatient therapy?

IOP involves more hours per week and a more structured, program-based schedule than standard weekly outpatient therapy, making it a middle ground between PHP and traditional counseling.

This page is educational. The right level of care for you or a loved one should be determined through a professional clinical assessment, not this page alone.

Ready for the Next Step?

Talk to a specialist about whether IOP fits your schedule and clinical needs.

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