Brighton Recovery CenterResidential Treatment in Salt Lake City, UT
Great to meet you
Brighton Recovery Center is a multifaceted treatment provider offering a comprehensive spectrum of care for substance use disorder and co-occurring mental health issues. Located in Salt Lake City and South Ogden, Utah, the center operates multiple locations including a Community Center and Recovery Centers, along with an Outpatient Center. They serve patients across residential inpatient programs, partial hospitalization (PHP/day treatment), intensive outpatient (IOP), standard outpatient, and sober living levels of care, progressing individuals through the full continuum based on clinical assessment. The center emphasizes dual diagnosis treatment, addressing both addiction and underlying mental health conditions simultaneously rather than sequentially. Their approach is multifaceted, utilizing individual assessment and personalized treatment planning alongside group therapy, individual and family therapy, medication management, and alternative interventions including recreation therapy, yoga, mindfulness, and meditation. Residential treatment is staffed 24 hours daily and typically involves 45 to 60-day stays with medical monitoring, psychiatric assessment, and family involvement. The program includes reintegration skills training and aftercare planning to support long-term recovery.
Role
Residential Treatment
Specialties & focus areas
Recovery focus
Co-occurring
Other focus areas
Evidence-based approaches
CBT
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy. Spots the thought-feeling-action loops that fuel urges, then rewires them with practical skills you take into the moment.
Group therapy
Group Therapy. A small facilitated circle where people working on similar struggles practice naming what is hard, hearing themselves in others, and learning skills together. The room is the medicine.
Trauma-informed care
Trauma-Informed Care. Approaches addiction as something layered on top of unprocessed trauma, not in isolation. Pacing matters more than confrontation.
Mindfulness
Mindfulness-Based Relapse Prevention. Practices noticing urges without acting on them, building the gap between trigger and choice.
Holistic
Holistic Care. Adds nutrition, sleep, movement, and mind-body practices alongside the clinical work. Recovery is whole-person; the body matters too.
Family systems
Family Systems work. Brings the people closest to you into the recovery picture, since urges and relationships rarely live in separate boxes.
MAT
Medication-Assisted Treatment (MAT). Pairs FDA-approved medications with counseling and behavioral therapy. Standard of care for opioid and alcohol use disorder; emerging evidence in gambling for impulsivity-targeting agents.
Activity therapy
Activity Therapy. Structured therapeutic activities, recreation, movement, hands-on tasks, used as a vehicle for connection and emotional regulation. Often paired with talk therapy in residential and group programs.
Cognitive behavioral therapy
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy. Spots the thought-feeling-action loops that fuel urges, then rewires them with practical skills you take into the moment.
Couples/family therapy
Family Therapy. Brings the people closest to the recovery into the room. Less about blame, more about updating the patterns that fed the cycle so the home becomes part of the recovery.
Dialectical behavior therapy
Dialectical Behavior Therapy. Pairs acceptance with change. Especially useful when emotions feel too big to ride out without acting on them.
Integrated mental and substance use disorder treatment
Integrated Treatment. Treats addiction and co-occurring mental health conditions in the same plan, rather than sequentially. Most clinically effective when both are present.
Individual psychotherapy
Individual Psychotherapy. One-to-one sessions with a licensed clinician. The standard-bearer of mental-health care; most evidence-based plans build around it.
What this facility offers
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