About Cazenovia Manor – Buffalo
Cazenovia Manor is a men’s residential recovery center in Buffalo, New York. The city is rich in history and culture, famously known as the home of spicy buffalo wings. It’s also neat how they’re by the Cazenovia River and its adjacent parks.
They provide help for people with substance use disorders or mental health conditions who require treatment and support in their sobriety journey. They offer a wide range of services for men onsite that include substance use and mental health counseling, vocational training, and basic primary medical care.
Men must be 18 years or older for admission and need intensive substance use treatment. They must be enrolled in a Medicaid-managed care plan for admission. The facility utilizes community style living with semi-private rooms and on site meals.
They believe that substance use disorder is a medical diagnosis and is treatable. Using the right combination of counseling, medication, skill building, and therapy, helps to restore hope in people who attend their recovery program.
Your early program includes intensive treatment, integrating mental health treatment with substance use counseling, and primary care onsite. After the initial steps in your program, you move into an integration program that connects you with community resources. It’s also neat that their center has semi-private rooms, community spaces, and a warm atmosphere with natural tones and decor. It can help relax you and get you in the mood to recover.
Your treatment program utilizes a trauma-informed approach with evidence-based practices, including medication assisted treatment (MAT), cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), and motivational interviewing (MI).
Several types of medication assisted treatments are available for different substances, including opioids and alcohol addiction. These medications are used to reduce withdrawal symptoms and cravings, making counseling far more effective.
The trauma informed care utilizes a distinctive model that encourages you to understand the trauma and substance abuse you experience while promoting healing and recovery. In a classroom setting, these steps are taken to help prevent retraumatization that may trigger cravings and substance use disorders.