Skip to site content

IHS Announces New Program to Support Youth After Successful Substance Abuse Treatment

by Joel Beckstead, Ph.D., ABPP, Acting Director, IHS Division of Behavioral Health and Raven Ross, MSW, IHS Division of Behavioral Health at IHS
Photo of the Youth Regional Treatment Center
Desert Sage Youth Wellness Center

The Indian Health Service has launched a new program to address the gap in services that occurs when youth are discharged upon successful completion of a Youth Regional Treatment Center (YRTC) program and return to their home community where necessary support systems may not exist.

The IHS currently funds 12 federal and tribal YRTCs that provide a range of clinical services rooted in culturally relevant, holistic models of care to American Indian and Alaska Native adolescents who abuse alcohol or drugs. However, once youth are discharged from the YRTC, they are often faced with leaving a structured environment only to return home to families unprepared to offer the needed support and where aftercare and case management resources can be limited, significantly decreasing the likelihood of a continued journey of wellness for youth exiting the care of an YRTC.

The YRTC Aftercare Pilot Project will develop promising practices between YRTCs and tribal communities to reduce alcohol and substance use relapse by identifying transitional services that can be culturally adapted to meet the needs of American Indian and Alaska Native youth to increase resiliency, self-coping, and provide support systems. By exploring solutions for how this continuum of care should take place after inpatient treatment, efforts will be made to establish community-based approaches to reduce alcohol and substance use relapse and establish effective reintegration processes.

The IHS Division of Behavioral Health awarded $1.62 million for Youth Regional Treatment Center Aftercare Pilot Projects to the following YRTCs:

The awards are for a three year period, in which both sites will develop innovative and collaborative strategies to improve the health of Native youth as they transition back into the communities in which they live.  This transition is a critical aspect of assuring the adolescent is provided guidance and effectively assisted in accessing a comprehensive array of health and community services during their sobriety journey. 

Related Content:

IHS Efforts on Opioid Crisis Highlighted During Senate Committee Hearing

New Youth Regional Treatment Center Opens in Oregon

IHS Strives to Address Alcohol Misuse


Joel Beckstead, Ph.D., ABPP, Acting Director, IHS Division of Behavioral Health and Raven Ross, MSW, IHS Division of Behavioral Health at IHS
Cmdr. Joel Beckstead is the Acting Director of the IHS Division of Behavioral Health. He is the IHS Alcohol and Substance Abuse Lead and previously served as the Clinical Director of Desert Visions Youth Wellness Center in Sacaton, Arizona. He holds a Ph.D. in clinical psychology from Brigham Young University and is board certified in clinical psychology by the American Board of Professional Psychology.

Raven Ross, MSW, a social worker and National Data Coordinator in the Division of Behavioral Health at IHS Headquarters, also contributed to this blog. She is an enrolled member of the Navajo Nation.