Core Values RecoveryTreatment options for Alex O
Presented by Core Values Recovery
A practical guide for choosing the right next step.
Program fit
What level of care and program model each provider describes in its own materials.
Environment fit
What the setting may feel like: mountain residential care, young-adult continuum, or men’s recovery community.
Admissions fit
What to verify directly: insurance, timing, medical needs, medication policy, and discharge planning.
This overview does not diagnose Alex, guarantee admission, or promise outcomes. Its purpose is to help you compare options clearly and ask better questions before choosing a path.
The right choice should match the need, the setting, and the transition plan.
Core criteria
- Level-of-care fit: detox, residential, PHP, IOP, outpatient, or step-down.
- Co-occurring mental health support and trauma capability.
- Family involvement and admissions clarity.
- Environment: privacy, peer culture, structure, accountability.
Working priorities for Alex O
- Substance-use treatment with enough clinical depth for co-occurring needs, if present.
- A setting that provides structure beyond the initial admission period.
- Clear transition planning instead of a cliff after discharge.
- Specific questions answered by admissions before commitment.
Three strong options with different strengths.
Sundance / Provo Canyon, Utah
Holladay, Utah
Carbondale, Colorado
Cirque Lodge
Private mountain treatment in Utah with detox, residential care, dual-diagnosis programming, 12-step work, CBT, and experiential therapies.
Known for
- Mount Timpanogos / Sundance-area setting.
- The Lodge and The Studio facilities.
- Equine, hiking, ropes, outdoor and experiential programming.
- Privacy and higher-comfort residential environment.
Good fit if…
- Alex needs supervised detox before deeper treatment.
- Privacy and physical setting matter.
- Family wants integrated substance-use and mental-health attention.
Balance House
A Utah program for young adult men with co-occurring mental health and substance-use disorders, built around family involvement, attachment work, and phased treatment.
Known for
- Dual-diagnosis framing.
- Attachment-driven and trauma-informed care.
- Family involvement, individual therapy, and group therapy.
- Residential phase with step-down/aftercare emphasis.
Good fit if…
- Alex fits the young-adult men’s profile.
- The family wants more involvement and accountability.
- A longer continuum is more useful than a short episode of care.
Jaywalker Lodge
A men’s recovery program in Carbondale, Colorado with residential treatment, PHP, transitional living, IOP, outpatient, sober living, and independent living options.
Known for
- Men’s peer culture and accountability.
- 90-day residential primary care at The Landing.
- Step-down options through PHP, transitional living, IOP, outpatient, sober living, and independent living.
- 12-step immersion and recovery community.
Good fit if…
- Alex would benefit from a men’s-only recovery culture.
- A Colorado reset is clinically and logistically appropriate.
- The family wants a longer runway after residential care.
Use admissions calls to test fit, not just availability.
Start with level of need
If detox, psychiatric stabilization, or medication complexity may be part of the picture, verify medical coverage first. Cirque appears strongest for the detox/residential stabilization lane.
Then consider the treatment environment
Balance House and Jaywalker both emphasize male peer work and longer structure. Balance is Utah young-adult/family focused; Jaywalker is Colorado men’s recovery community focused.
Lock the step-down plan
Ask what happens after the first level of care. The strongest option is the one with a clear plan for the first 90 days after admission.
Suggested call order: Cirque first if medical stabilization is the priority; Balance first if Utah proximity and family involvement are the priority; Jaywalker first if a men’s recovery community and longer continuum are the priority.
Use the same questions with each program.
Clinical and program fit
- What level of care would Alex likely enter, and how is that determined?
- Can you manage detox, psychiatric symptoms, medication needs, or co-occurring diagnoses?
- What does a typical week look like?
- How much individual therapy, group therapy, family therapy, and case management is included?
- What happens if Alex wants to leave early?
Logistics and transition
- What insurance do you accept, and what is the likely out-of-pocket exposure?
- How fast could admission happen?
- What should be brought or prepared before admission?
- What contact and updates are provided during treatment?
- What is the discharge and aftercare plan?
Make three calls, compare the answers, then decide.
1. Call admissions
Give each program the same summary of Alex’s needs so the comparison is fair and useful.
2. Verify money and timing
Ask for insurance verification, expected length of stay, deposit requirements, and admission window.
3. Choose the plan
Choose the option with the clearest clinical fit, the strongest transition plan, and the most specific answers from admissions.
Based on official provider materials.
Source trail
Official websites were used for provider summaries, program structure, admissions links, and facility images.
Key official domains: cirquelodge.com, balancehouse.com, jaywalkerlodge.com.
Caveats
Insurance, exact level-of-care placement, medication policy, waitlist timing, and admission approval must be confirmed directly with each provider.
This overview does not include an independent licensing, inspection, or outcomes audit.