Accreditation(s) indicate the organization's national, state, or industry recognition for the treatment of substance use disorders and or mental health conditions.
Medication designed to help with withdrawal symptoms and cravings may be offered as part of an addiction treatment program.
Phone numbers listed within our directory for individual providers will connect directly to that provider.
Any calls to numbers marked with (I) symbols will be routed through a trusted partner, more details can be found by visiting https://recovered.org/terms.
For any specific questions please email us at info@recovered.org.

Pittsburgh Mercy in Pittsburgh Pennsylvania

The Recovered Trustscore is calculated from a facility's online reviews and verified accreditations, A Bayesian average is applied to all rehabs to ensure fair visibility. Read here for more info

Pittsburgh Mercy has 2 centers for substance misuse and addiction treatment in Pittsburgh PA. Get pricing, insurance information, and rehab facility reviews.
  • Pittsburgh Mercy
    412 East Commons Street, Pittsburgh, PA, 15212
    star star star star star
    Recovered TrustScore 3.55 / 5
    • Outpatient
    • Telemedicine
    • Federal, or any government funding for substance use treatment programs
    • Medicare
    • Medicaid
    • Private health insurance
    • Cash or self-payment
    • State-financed health insurance plan other than Medicaid
    3 accreditations
    MAT
    Co-Occurring Disorder Treatment

    This centers Recovered Trustscore is based on the total amount of key accreditations (3) & publicly available review data (23 reviews for this rehab) online for this rehab center.

  • Pittsburgh Mercy
    330 South 9th Street, Pittsburgh, PA, 15203
    star star star star star
    Recovered TrustScore 4.03 / 5
    • Outpatient
    • Telemedicine
    • Federal, or any government funding for substance use treatment programs
    • Medicare
    • Medicaid
    • Private health insurance
    • Cash or self-payment
    • State-financed health insurance plan other than Medicaid
    3 accreditations
    MAT
    Co-Occurring Disorder Treatment

    This centers Recovered Trustscore is based on the total amount of key accreditations (3) & publicly available review data online for this rehab center.

Full Center Overview: Pittsburgh Mercy 412 East Commons Street, Pittsburgh PA, 15212

Claimed
Call Us 24/7 Free and Confidential
Waiting for photo Waiting for photo

About

412 East Commons Street, Pittsburgh
PA, 15212

Phone: 412-323-4500

Website: http://www.pittsburghmercy.org

Opening hours
Day Range
Monday Open all day
Tuesday Open all day
Wednesday Open all day
Thursday Open all day
Friday Open all day
Saturday Closed
Sunday Closed
star star star star star
Recovered TrustScore 3.55 / 5

This centers Recovered Trustscore is based on the total amount of key accreditations (3) & publicly available review data (23 reviews for this rehab) online for this rehab center. A Bayesian average is applied to all rehabs to ensure fair visibility. Read here for more info

Important Information

Age Groups Accepted Adults, Young adults
Languages Sign language services for the deaf and hard of hearing
Special Programs/Groups Offered Young adults, Adult women, Adult men, Seniors or older adults, Criminal justice (other than DUI/DWI)/Forensic clients, Clients with co-occurring mental and substance use disorders, Clients who have experienced intimate partner violence, domestic violence, Clients who have experienced trauma
Specialization Substance use treatment, Treatment for co-occurring substance use plus either serious mental health illness in adults/serious emotional disturbance in children

Payment & Insurance Accepted at This Facility

  Accepted
Federal, or any government funding for substance use treatment programs check icon
Medicare check icon
Medicaid check icon
Private health insurance check icon
Cash or self-payment check icon
State-financed health insurance plan other than Medicaid check icon

Help offered by Pittsburgh Mercy at 412 East Commons Street

Treatment Approaches

  • check icon
    Anger management

    Anger is a powerful emotion and one that is often closely tied to addiction. Many people with behavioral or substance addictions will experience anger in many forms, both internally and externally. Anger management combined with other evidence based treatment can help patients control their emotions and evaluate situations without resorting to anger.

  • check icon
    Brief intervention

    Brief intervention aims to inform people who are abusing drugs and alcohol at a high level of the risk of dependence and addiction. The interventions are usually targeted at those who are yet to develop a substance use disorder but who are displaying the signs of potentially becoming addicted.

  • check icon
    Cognitive behavioral therapy

    Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) is a commonly used type of therapy widely used in addiction treatment, rehab and recovery as a way of identifying emotional triggers that lead to substance abuse and developing methods to control them.

  • check icon
    Motivational interviewing

    Motivational Interviewing (MI) is often recommended as an evidence-based approach to behavior change and is often used in addiction treatment. MI is a more collaborative approach to therapy and requires patient and counselor to explore issues without advice, judgment, or a set path laid out.

  • check icon
    Relapse prevention

    The Relapse Prevention (RP) model is widely used in alcohol and drug rehab treatments. It uses CBT practises to prepare those approaching the end of rehab treatment to begin a life of sobriety without falling into old habits of substance abuse.

  • check icon
    Substance use disorder counseling

    Substance use disorder counseling can incorporate a wide variety of therapies and and treatment models.

  • check icon
    Telemedicine/telehealth therapy

    Telehealth has grown in popularity and availability across all forms of treatment in the wake of COVID-19. For those who are unable to leave their homes (such as immunocompromised individuals) telehealth services can provide addiction treatment virtually and provide a support network for people unable to receive normal treatment.

  • check icon
    Trauma-related counseling

    Many people who have experienced trauma will turn to drugs and alcohol as a coping mechanism, which often leads to dependence and addiction. Receiving counseling for trauma in line with addiction treatment can help uncover the connection between them and learn to manage the emotional reactions to trauma that cause substance misuse.

  • check icon
    12-step facilitation

    12-step programs have been helping those suffering from alcohol and drug addictions for nearly 100 years. They offer a guided path toward recovery that is not based on rigidity but practice and self improvement. They can also provide a support network of people who empathise with and understand the challenges of addiction recovery.

Counseling

  • check icon HIV or AIDS education, counseling, or support
  • check icon Hepatitis education, counseling, or support
  • check icon Health education services other than HIV/AIDS or hepatitis
  • check icon Substance use disorder education
  • check icon Smoking/vaping/tobacco cessation counseling
  • check icon
    Individual counseling

    Individual counseling involves patients speaking with a counselor or therapist about their addiction in a one-to-one setting. This type of counseling will often incorporate different forms of behavioral therapies such as CBT in order to help the patient understand their psychological relationship with substance abuse and develop techniques to manage cravings and future temptation.

  • check icon
    Group counseling

    Group counseling can takes place in both inpatient and outpatient settings and involves those afflicted with substances use disorders/behavioral addictions meeting to discuss their issues. This form of counseling can help create a level of empathy and understanding of others journeys with addiction, which can help to give perspective on an individual's addiction. It also helps to build a support network which helps reduce relapse and promotes positive relationships outside of substance abuse.

  • check icon
    Family counseling

    Family counseling for substance use disorders and behavioral addictions helps the patient repair relationships with those close to them through open dialogue around past miss doings that were caused by addiction. This helps reestablish trust and builds a support network for the patient.

Pharmacotherapies

  • check icon
    Acamprosate (Campral®)

    Often known by the brand name Campral, Acamprosate is a common medication used in alcohol dependence treatment. Unlike other medicines that make alcohol unpleasant to the user, Acamprosate works by reducing the brain's dependence on it.

  • check icon
    Buprenorphine with naloxone

    Buprenorphine is an opioid agonist that reduces the effects of opioid withdrawal. Naloxone rapidly reverses the effects of opioids, preventing overdose and severe withdrawal symptoms

  • check icon
    Naltrexone (oral)

    Naltrexone blocks the pleasure receptors that are interacted with by alcohol and narcotics. This effectively removes any pleasurable sensations the substance offers and reduces the need to take them.

  • check icon
    Naltrexone (extended-release, injectable)

    Naltrexone blocks the pleasure receptors that are interacted with by alcohol and narcotics. This effectively removes any pleasurable sensations the substance offers and reduces the need to take them.

  • check icon Nicotine replacement
  • check icon Non-nicotine smoking/tobacco cessation

Assessment/Pre-treatment

  • check icon Comprehensive mental health assessment
  • check icon Comprehensive substance use assessment
  • check icon Interim services for clients
  • check icon Screening for tobacco use
  • check icon Screening for substance use
  • check icon Screening for mental disorders

Setting

  • check icon
    Outpatient

    Outpatient treatment centers offer the same level of care as inpatient settings while also allowing the patient to be able to return home each day

  • check icon
    Outpatient day treatment or partial hospitalization

    Outpatient day treatment or PHP requires patients to attend treatment for up to ten hours a day, most if not all days of the week while living at home.

  • check icon
    Intensive outpatient treatment

    IOP requires patients to attend day treatment for three hours a day, often for five days a week but declining as recovery improves.

  • check icon Outpatient methadone/buprenorphine or naltrexone treatment
  • check icon Regular outpatient treatment

Ancillary Services

  • check icon Case management service
  • check icon Domestic violence services, including family or partner
  • check icon Mental health services
  • check icon Social skills development
  • check icon Transportation assistance

Transitional Services

  • check icon Aftercare/continuing care
  • check icon Discharge Planning
  • check icon Naloxone and overdose education
  • check icon Outcome follow-up after discharge

Type of Opioid Treatment

  • check icon Prescribes buprenorphine
  • check icon Prescribes naltrexone
  • check icon Relapse prevention with naltrexone
  • check icon Accepts clients using MAT but prescribed elsewhere

External Opioid Medications Source

  • check icon In-network prescribing entity
  • check icon Other contracted prescribing entity
  • check icon No formal relationship with prescribing entity

Testing

  • check icon TB screening
  • check icon Metabolic syndrome monitoring

Recovery Support Services

  • check icon Housing services
  • check icon Mentoring/peer support

Gender Accepted

  • check icon Female
  • check icon Male

Opioid Medications used in Treatment

  • check icon Buprenorphine used in Treatment
  • check icon Naltrexone used in Treatment

External Source of Medications Used for Alcohol Use Disorder Treatment

  • check icon In-network prescribing entity
  • check icon No formal relationship with prescribing entity

Facility Operation (e.g., Private, Public)

  • check icon Private non-profit organization

Facility Smoking Policy

  • check icon Smoking not permitted

Type of Alcohol Use Disorder Treatment

  • check icon Accepts clients using medication assisted treatment for alcohol use disorder but prescribed elsewhere

Full Center Overview: Pittsburgh Mercy 330 South 9th Street, Pittsburgh PA, 15203

Claimed
Call Us 24/7 Free and Confidential
Waiting for photo Waiting for photo

About

330 South 9th Street, Pittsburgh
PA, 15203

Phone: 412-488-4040

Website: http://www.pittsburghmercy.org

star star star star star
Recovered TrustScore 4.03 / 5

This centers Recovered Trustscore is based on the total amount of key accreditations (3) & publicly available review data online for this rehab center. A Bayesian average is applied to all rehabs to ensure fair visibility. Read here for more info

Important Information

Age Groups Accepted Children/adolescents
Languages Sign language services for the deaf and hard of hearing
Special Programs/Groups Offered Young adults, Adult women, Adult men, Seniors or older adults, Criminal justice (other than DUI/DWI)/Forensic clients, Clients with co-occurring mental and substance use disorders, Clients who have experienced intimate partner violence, domestic violence, Clients who have experienced trauma
Specialization Substance use treatment, Treatment for co-occurring substance use plus either serious mental health illness in adults/serious emotional disturbance in children

Payment & Insurance Accepted at This Facility

  Accepted
Federal, or any government funding for substance use treatment programs check icon
Medicare check icon
Medicaid check icon
Private health insurance check icon
Cash or self-payment check icon
State-financed health insurance plan other than Medicaid check icon

Help offered by Pittsburgh Mercy at 330 South 9th Street

Treatment Approaches

  • check icon
    Anger management

    Anger is a powerful emotion and one that is often closely tied to addiction. Many people with behavioral or substance addictions will experience anger in many forms, both internally and externally. Anger management combined with other evidence based treatment can help patients control their emotions and evaluate situations without resorting to anger.

  • check icon
    Brief intervention

    Brief intervention aims to inform people who are abusing drugs and alcohol at a high level of the risk of dependence and addiction. The interventions are usually targeted at those who are yet to develop a substance use disorder but who are displaying the signs of potentially becoming addicted.

  • check icon
    Cognitive behavioral therapy

    Cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) is a commonly used type of therapy widely used in addiction treatment, rehab and recovery as a way of identifying emotional triggers that lead to substance abuse and developing methods to control them.

  • check icon
    Motivational interviewing

    Motivational Interviewing (MI) is often recommended as an evidence-based approach to behavior change and is often used in addiction treatment. MI is a more collaborative approach to therapy and requires patient and counselor to explore issues without advice, judgment, or a set path laid out.

  • check icon
    Relapse prevention

    The Relapse Prevention (RP) model is widely used in alcohol and drug rehab treatments. It uses CBT practises to prepare those approaching the end of rehab treatment to begin a life of sobriety without falling into old habits of substance abuse.

  • check icon
    Substance use disorder counseling

    Substance use disorder counseling can incorporate a wide variety of therapies and and treatment models.

  • check icon
    Telemedicine/telehealth therapy

    Telehealth has grown in popularity and availability across all forms of treatment in the wake of COVID-19. For those who are unable to leave their homes (such as immunocompromised individuals) telehealth services can provide addiction treatment virtually and provide a support network for people unable to receive normal treatment.

  • check icon
    Trauma-related counseling

    Many people who have experienced trauma will turn to drugs and alcohol as a coping mechanism, which often leads to dependence and addiction. Receiving counseling for trauma in line with addiction treatment can help uncover the connection between them and learn to manage the emotional reactions to trauma that cause substance misuse.

  • check icon
    12-step facilitation

    12-step programs have been helping those suffering from alcohol and drug addictions for nearly 100 years. They offer a guided path toward recovery that is not based on rigidity but practice and self improvement. They can also provide a support network of people who empathise with and understand the challenges of addiction recovery.

Counseling

  • check icon HIV or AIDS education, counseling, or support
  • check icon Hepatitis education, counseling, or support
  • check icon Health education services other than HIV/AIDS or hepatitis
  • check icon Substance use disorder education
  • check icon Smoking/vaping/tobacco cessation counseling
  • check icon
    Individual counseling

    Individual counseling involves patients speaking with a counselor or therapist about their addiction in a one-to-one setting. This type of counseling will often incorporate different forms of behavioral therapies such as CBT in order to help the patient understand their psychological relationship with substance abuse and develop techniques to manage cravings and future temptation.

  • check icon
    Group counseling

    Group counseling can takes place in both inpatient and outpatient settings and involves those afflicted with substances use disorders/behavioral addictions meeting to discuss their issues. This form of counseling can help create a level of empathy and understanding of others journeys with addiction, which can help to give perspective on an individual's addiction. It also helps to build a support network which helps reduce relapse and promotes positive relationships outside of substance abuse.

  • check icon
    Family counseling

    Family counseling for substance use disorders and behavioral addictions helps the patient repair relationships with those close to them through open dialogue around past miss doings that were caused by addiction. This helps reestablish trust and builds a support network for the patient.

Pharmacotherapies

  • check icon
    Acamprosate (Campral®)

    Often known by the brand name Campral, Acamprosate is a common medication used in alcohol dependence treatment. Unlike other medicines that make alcohol unpleasant to the user, Acamprosate works by reducing the brain's dependence on it.

  • check icon
    Buprenorphine with naloxone

    Buprenorphine is an opioid agonist that reduces the effects of opioid withdrawal. Naloxone rapidly reverses the effects of opioids, preventing overdose and severe withdrawal symptoms

  • check icon
    Naltrexone (oral)

    Naltrexone blocks the pleasure receptors that are interacted with by alcohol and narcotics. This effectively removes any pleasurable sensations the substance offers and reduces the need to take them.

  • check icon
    Naltrexone (extended-release, injectable)

    Naltrexone blocks the pleasure receptors that are interacted with by alcohol and narcotics. This effectively removes any pleasurable sensations the substance offers and reduces the need to take them.

  • check icon Nicotine replacement
  • check icon Non-nicotine smoking/tobacco cessation

Assessment/Pre-treatment

  • check icon Comprehensive mental health assessment
  • check icon Comprehensive substance use assessment
  • check icon Interim services for clients
  • check icon Screening for tobacco use
  • check icon Screening for substance use
  • check icon Screening for mental disorders

Ancillary Services

  • check icon Case management service
  • check icon Domestic violence services, including family or partner
  • check icon Mental health services
  • check icon Social skills development
  • check icon Transportation assistance

Setting

  • check icon
    Outpatient

    Outpatient treatment centers offer the same level of care as inpatient settings while also allowing the patient to be able to return home each day

  • check icon
    Intensive outpatient treatment

    IOP requires patients to attend day treatment for three hours a day, often for five days a week but declining as recovery improves.

  • check icon Outpatient methadone/buprenorphine or naltrexone treatment
  • check icon Regular outpatient treatment

Transitional Services

  • check icon Aftercare/continuing care
  • check icon Discharge Planning
  • check icon Naloxone and overdose education
  • check icon Outcome follow-up after discharge

Type of Opioid Treatment

  • check icon Prescribes buprenorphine
  • check icon Prescribes naltrexone
  • check icon Relapse prevention with naltrexone
  • check icon Accepts clients using MAT but prescribed elsewhere

Testing

  • check icon Drug or alcohol urine screening
  • check icon TB screening
  • check icon Metabolic syndrome monitoring

Recovery Support Services

  • check icon Housing services
  • check icon Mentoring/peer support
  • check icon Employment counseling or training

External Opioid Medications Source

  • check icon In-network prescribing entity
  • check icon Other contracted prescribing entity
  • check icon No formal relationship with prescribing entity

Gender Accepted

  • check icon Female
  • check icon Male

Opioid Medications used in Treatment

  • check icon Buprenorphine used in Treatment
  • check icon Naltrexone used in Treatment

External Source of Medications Used for Alcohol Use Disorder Treatment

  • check icon In-network prescribing entity
  • check icon No formal relationship with prescribing entity

Facility Operation (e.g., Private, Public)

  • check icon Private non-profit organization

Facility Smoking Policy

  • check icon Smoking not permitted

Type of Alcohol Use Disorder Treatment

  • check icon Accepts clients using medication assisted treatment for alcohol use disorder but prescribed elsewhere

Treatment Centers Nearby