Intensive Outpatient

If you’re looking for an outpatient drug or alcohol rehab in Florida, patients can enroll in the intensive outpatient program at the Florida Recovery Center to receive 10 to 12 hours of group, individual and family therapy each week. This program is ideal for those who live locally, continue to work and need treatment during evening hours. Patients must attend community 12-step meetings, and their families are encouraged to participate in weekly patient-family sessions.

The primary goal of the IOP is to help patients abstain and help you enjoy your life as a recovering person. University of Florida faculty and Shands staff will examine some of the behaviors that have caused you to have difficulty in the past, and change those behaviors to support your new way of life. We want you to establish and maintain a sober support system. To that end, we will be interested in helping those people closest to you by providing family/couples (group) counseling. In short, our goal is to help you effectively manage the social, spiritual, physical and emotional aspects of your life to maintain a lifestyle of recovery.

For more information about the Florida Recovery Center IOP in Gainesville, please call 352.265.4FRC(4372).

Florida Recovery Center
3850 N.W. 83rd Street #201
Gainesville, FL 32606

Florida Recovery Center – Tampa 

The Florida Recovery Center offers evaluations and an outpatient program in Tampa. Therapists and physicians offer treatment for alcohol and drug addiction in co-occurance with depression, anxiety and eating disorders.

Services include:

  • Evaluations
  • Psychological testing
  • Individual, group and family therapy
  • Support groups
  • Education
  • Referrals

Florida Recovery Center in Tampa
324 South Hyde Park Avenue #375
Tampa, FL 33606

For more information about the Florida Recovery Center in Tampa, please call 813.251.HELP(4357).

Florida Recovery Center at Orlando Health

The Florida Recovery Center offers evaluations and an outpatient program in Orlando through a relationship with Orlando Health and South Seminole Hospital in Longwood, Florida. Therapists and physicians offer treatment for alcohol and drug addiction in co-occurance with depression, anxiety and eating disorders. The clincial treatment team can also treat patients with chronic pain issues.

Services include:

  • Comprehensive Evaluations
  • Detoxification
  • Pain Consults
  • Intensive Outpatient Program
  • Professional Aftercare Program

For more information about the Florida Recovery Center at Orlando Health, please call 855.265.4FRC(4372.)

Florida Recovery Center at Orlando Health 
4555 West Warren Avenue 
Longwood, FL 32750

Who We Are 

Scott Teitelbaum MD, FASAM, MRO is an associate professor and vice chair for the University of Florida Department of Psychiatry and chief of the division of addiction medicine. He is also the medical director for the Florida Recovery Center. Dr. Teitelbaum is the 2010 recipient of the Conway Hunter award and a consultant to the White House and the New York Yankees. He and the FRC team have evaluated and successfully treated hundreds of physicians from across the nation.

John Harden, MPH, LCSW is the executive director for the Florida Recovery Center, and he is also on faculty with the University of Florida Department of Psychiatry in the division of addiction medicine. With 25 years of clinical experience in addiction and related disorders, Mr. Harden remains active in clinical practice utilizing a systems approach to affect change and recovery. He has evaluated and successfully treated more than 1,000 physicians and other health-care professionals, earning his reputation as a top expert in the field.

Timothy Huckaby, MD is the medical director and chief of pain and addiction medicine for the Florida Recovery Center at Orlando Health. He is also an assistant professor at the University of Florida College of Medicine. Dr. Huckaby is a board-certified anesthesiologist, who has been trained in an addiction medicine fellowship at UF and an obstetric anesthesiology fellowship at Harvard.