Alcohol Use Support Groups in Pittsburgh, PA

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Check out support groups located nearby or offering teletherapy in Pennsylvania below.

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Intensive Outpatient - Day - Jefferson
Intensive Outpatient Group sessions enabling process and treatment in a group setting for behavioral health and substance use recovery. Conducted via In-Person, Tele-Health or Hybrid. Evening IOP also available from 5p-8p
Photo of LaurelCare Treatment Services, Treatment Center in Pittsburgh, PA
Hosted by LaurelCare Treatment Services
Treatment Center, LPC
Not Verified Not Verified
Group meets in Clairton, PA 15025
Intensive Outpatient Group sessions enabling process and treatment in a group setting for behavioral health and substance use recovery. Conducted via In-Person, Tele-Health or Hybrid. Evening IOP also available from 5p-8p
(412) 960-1218 View (412) 960-1218
Intensive Outpatient - Day - Kennedy
Intensive Outpatient Group sessions enabling process and treatment in a group setting for behavioral health and substance use recovery. Conducted via In-Person, Tele-Health or Hybrid. Evening IOP also available from 5p-8p
Photo of LaurelCare Treatment Services, Treatment Center in Pittsburgh, PA
Hosted by LaurelCare Treatment Services
Treatment Center, LPC
Not Verified Not Verified
Group meets in Coraopolis, PA 15108
Intensive Outpatient Group sessions enabling process and treatment in a group setting for behavioral health and substance use recovery. Conducted via In-Person, Tele-Health or Hybrid. Evening IOP also available from 5p-8p
(412) 960-1218 View (412) 960-1218
Addictions Processing Group
Join Untethered Therapy’s Lindsey Barker, LPC, and a group of your peers for weekly group-based therapy sessions for individuals struggling with addictions of all kinds. In these weekly sessions, Lindsey will facilitate conversation, connection, and healing to support your recovery.
Photo of Lindsey Barker, Licensed Professional Counselor in Pittsburgh, PA
Hosted by Lindsey Barker
Licensed Professional Counselor, LPC, MA
Verified Verified
Group meets in Bellevue, PA 15202
Join Untethered Therapy’s Lindsey Barker, LPC, and a group of your peers for weekly group-based therapy sessions for individuals struggling with addictions of all kinds. In these weekly sessions, Lindsey will facilitate conversation, connection, and healing to support your recovery.
(412) 960-6662 View (412) 960-6662

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Alcohol Use Support Groups

Are there specific medications for alcohol use?

There are oral medications approved to treat alcohol use disorder—such as disulfiram, acamprosate, and naltrexone, which also comes in an injectable form. These medications do help people reduce their drinking as well as avoid the problem of relapse. Naltrexone helps reduce cravings, disulfiram can make a person feel sick when they drink, and acamprosate may help ease symptoms like poor sleep and anxious feelings.

How do alcohol recovery or rehabilitation programs work?

In inpatient programs, individuals live in a facility with other patients in recovery; in outpatient programs,individuals live at home. These facilities are staffed with healthcare professionals including physicians, nurses, psychologists, counselors, and psychotherapists. Staff can also include people who have recovered themselves, serving as mentors and guides. These programs may use abstinence, harm reduction, detoxification, psychotherapy, and other tools for recovery.

How do 12-step programs combined with psychotherapy work?

Members of 12-step programs help each other reach abstinence and work to maintain it. These programs promote complete change in the individual’s emotional, mental, physical, and even spiritual perspectives. Some programs require that new members attend 90 meetings in 90 days. Many people do attend these programs in conjunction with their work in psychotherapy; the combination of therapy along with 12-step can be extremely effective.

How does harm reduction combined with psychotherapy work?

According to the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, harm reduction prevents death, injury, disease, overdose, and substance misuse. People who choose harm reduction for alcohol use reduce the amount of alcohol they intake. It is not abstinence-based like a 12-step program, but combining harm reduction with psychotherapy proves to be effective for many people.