Crossroads Treatment Centers Valuation & Funding
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Crossroads Treatment Centers Investors
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Where is Crossroads Treatment Centers?
GREENVILLE, S.C. — Crossroads Treatment Centers, a national leader in the treatment of Opioid Use Disorder, announced today that it has opened a new medication-assisted treatment center in Neptune City , New Jersey. READ MORE
Who is the Chief Operating Officer of Crossroads?
GREENVILLE, S.C. — Crossroads Treatment Centers, a national leader in the treatment of Opioid Use Disorder, has named Kimberly Kollwelter as Chief Operating Officer. Kollwelter brings over 16 years of clinical and operational leadership experience in the healthcare industry to her new role at Crossroads. READ MORE
The Development of The Crossroads Program
Crossroads was originally called the Palmer Drug Abuse Program (PDAP) and began as a nonprofit Enthusiastic Approach, 12-step support group for young people and parents in 1982.
The Growth of The Crossroads Program
Crossroads began having families from the Kansas City-area contact us in 2001. Parents began sending their kids to St. Louis and holding their own parent support group meetings in KC. Eventually, the staff started a rotation and began driving to Kansas City’s weekly to support the parents.
No support from management
Clinicians are not valued - and the Regional Director tell you to your face that you are not essential. Treated doctors/prescribers better than other staff. They did a lot of sneaky stuff. One day you know who to contact about something, the next day they are gone but you're never notified of that or who would be taking their place.#N#Horrible!
Love the other employees
High turn over and burn out rate. Administration seem to have favorites. Caseloads are high which make it impossible to give the patients what they need. Programmatically change is always a constant. Leave work most days with the realization that something didn't get done and paperwork will have to wait.
Good luck having any equity amongst staff
Management is awful, incompetent, and not willing to accommodate. I work 2 jobs and they are trying to force me into part time, even though this is my full time job. Lunch breaks? Forget it. The dont staff properly for employees to take breaks.
Great Place!
Great place to work! Love my coworkers and helping patients! It can be difficult at times but the work is so rewarding that it makes it worth it! Awesome mission and values!
Nice structure to set up clinics. Go through managers like I go through paper towels
Brutal treatment of middle managers. Do value patients, do not seem to value employees. There is a sign in each clinic basically asking for people to report employees. I understand they want patients treated well. I do too. But that method creates a culture where employees feel mistrusted and not valued.
We actually help patients and can do so because we work in a supportive atmosphere free from drama and hostility
Crossroads pays decent and helps with recertification fees. The staff is great and the patients are nice I can’t think of one staff that has not attempted to assist when needed.
No stability, No bridge between Corp. and center
Excellent Idea about culture but it is NOT practiced at levels above the Centers. High staff attrition directly related to absence of onboard training, follow up training and updated training. The computer system in use makes double work a necessity.
What is Crossroads Ibogaine?
Crossroads Ibogaine – Inpatient treatments for opioid addiction. If you or a loved one has a substance abuse problem, then you understand that treatment can be a struggle. It can also be expensive.
Is ibogaine good for addiction?
As you have read throughout our site, Ibogaine is an extremely effective tool for treating addiction, but many people ask which addictions it can treat. Most of the time Ibogaine treatment is associated with opiate addiction, things like heroin, prescription painkillers, suboxone, and methadone–but that is not all it treats. The important distinction to make here is that the medicine is very effective at curbing and even eliminating most opiate withdrawal symptoms but it also has a much higher function for addressing addiction and that is the psychological, and sometimes spiritual, insight it provides to the individual.
What is ibogaine used for?
Most of the time Ibogaine treatment is associated with opiate addiction, things like heroin, prescription painkillers, suboxone, and methadone–but that is not all it treats.