American Addiction Centers National Rehabs Directory

Center For Dependency, Addiction And Rehabilitation (Cedar) A Division Of Uchealth

1693 N. Quentin Street, Aurora, Colorado, 80045
CeDAR (Center for Dependency, Addiction and Rehabilitation) is a world-class residential addiction and co-occurring disorder treatment facility regarded for our integrated partnership within The University of Colorado Hospital, a nationally recognized academic medical center. This partnership allows our highly specialized multidisciplinary treatment team to provide comprehensive care to patients age 18 and over utilizing advanced evidenced based psychosocial, medical and psychiatric approaches. These advanced capabilities allow us to provide personalized treatment addressing specific medical, psychological, social and spiritual needs that lead many of us into addiction. Levels of care include: Detoxification, Primary Residential Program (31-days), Residential Extended Care, Outpatient Services / IOP, Impaired Professionals Program, Ascent Elite Athlete Program, Family Week, CARSS Program (Cedar Alumni Support Services Program), CeDAR’s tranquil atmosphere, nestled within a private seven-acre tract on the Anschutz Medical Campus, is remarkable and unique. Our commitment is to help each person emerge from the unmanageable worlds of addiction and mental health disorders. Recovery is possible and hope can be found – you are not alone. We are here to help you begin your journey of recovery.

Facility Highlights

  • Specialized treatment tracks for Impaired Professionals
  • 31-day gender responsive and trauma integrated Primary Residential Treatment for adults
  • State of the art Detoxification and Assessment Services

Specialization

  • Residential Treatment

    Residential treatment programs provide housing (food and meals) in addition to treatment for substance abuse. Some facilities offer only short-term residential treatment, some offer only long-term treatment and others offer both, ranging from a few days to many months, based on patient needs.
  • Medical Detoxification

    Drugs and alcohol have widespread effects throughout your body, including but not limited to the addiction and/or physical/psychological dependence that develops with substance abuse over time. Many organ systems are affected by addiction and will react to withdrawal. The term “medical detoxification” means that there is a trained and licensed medical professional onsite to monitor your vital signs and protect your physical and emotional health as your body goes through withdrawal.

Facility Settings

  • Hospital

Financial Details

  • Up to 70%

Treatment Center Links

Treatment center details

Service settings

Treatment approaches

Payment accepted

Special programs

Type of care

Hospitals

Opioid medications used in treatment

External opioid medications source

Type of alcohol use disorder treatment

Type of opioid treatment

Pharmacotherapies

Facility operation

License/certification/accreditation

Payment/insurance/funding accepted

Special programs/groups offered

Assessment/pre-treatment

Screening and testing

Transitional services

Ancillary services

Other addictions

Detoxification

Counseling services and education

Medical services

Tobacco/screening services

Facility smoking policy

Age groups accepted

Gender accepted

Language services

Show all facility offerings

Patient reviews

Overall ratings
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  • 3.7
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  • 3.4
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    Treatment effectiveness
  • 3.7
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    Meals & nutrition
Note
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James
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CeDAR balance billed me for my treatment. They have continually told me insurance only covered a portion of my stay. I have clear evidence that insurance in fact covered my entire stay. Insurance paid a reduced rate due to its negotiated rate with CeDAR. CeDAR in turn balance billed me. This may very well represent conversion in addition to a breach of contract.
Trudy
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This place is terrible. You lose your your children your vehicles your fob your self esteem and this leaves you with nothing, just nothing. All they want is your money and they do not help at all. The inpatient treatment is useless the IOp is even more useless. You end up being street people with no place to go and nothing to do. You are reduced to working mim wage jogs which get you no place. Do not go here period.
CAR
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This is one of the worst rehab facilities that you could even contemplate attending. I was suggest that you stay far away. They are unethical and they do not do collaborative treatment planning or collaborative outpatient planning with you. They deliver their recommendations as ultimatums and violate ethical principles of dual relationships that are forbidden by every mental health discipline in the state of Colorado.Do not trust this place under any circumstances for your rehabilitation and treatment from substance use.
K Q
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I\'m reviewing the Intensive Outpatient Program (IOP), which is one of the substance abuse treatment programs at CeDAR. This review begins with the positive aspects of the IOP, followed by my negative experiences. The IOP participants I met were men and women of various ages who were addicted to one or more substances (most typically alcohol, opioids, and/or stimulants). New participants go through a psych evaluation with CeDAR medical doctors. Both of the doctors I met were bright and attentive. They got up to speed quickly on my psychiatric history and medications. I was impressed that CeDAR had these specialists and I felt reassured that they were paying attention to my psychiatric condition. The primary IOP activity is the three-hour-long group sessions with an addiction counselor (36 sessions over 12 weeks). CeDAR provides a spacious and pleasant meeting space. Breathalyzer screening prior to each session ensures the sobriety of attendees. Instead of focusing on the 12 steps, the IOP relies largely on psychotherapy. The sessions I liked the best were directly related to the nature of addiction and the compulsion of people to use substances they are addicted to. I found it especially helpful when group members shared how their addictions began and progressed, and how they coped with difficulties in maintaining sobriety. Unfortunately some of the IOP group activities were stressful and many did not provide me with any useful tools for coping with my addiction. Topics such as “Family Sculpting” and the “Johari Window” left me wondering what I was doing there at all (you can google these for descriptions). I was told that “Family Sculpting” might be helpful to an addict with a poor understanding of their own family dynamics. I don\'t know if anyone in the group had that problem, but I did not find the exercise helpful. The “Johari Window” seems to be more of a curiosity than an actual method for overcoming addiction. One full three-hour session was frivolously spent making collages by cutting pictures from old magazines. I believe CeDAR should tell participants about all the different topics up front so that people can research them and opt out of the ones that aren\'t helpful. My frustration eventually came to a head and it became clear I was not benefiting enough from the IOP to continue in it. I\'ve highlighted some aspects of CeDAR that were positive for me, but the group sessions were mostly negative. It was no comfort when CeDAR explained their treatment “doesn\'t work for everyone.” I left CeDAR depressed and depleted of all enthusiasm for beating my addiction to alcohol. Your mileage may vary. I encourage anyone seeking substance abuse treatment to ask a lot of questions before signing up for anything.
Paul
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My experience at CeDAR was nothing short of exceptional. The staff was truly caring, compassionate and genuinely concerned with my successful recovery from the disease of addiction. The accommodations, food and physical fitness facility were of excellent quality and the grounds upon which the facility is situated was peaceful and allowed me to focus on my treatment in a calm and undisturbed manner. I was also a client in the Residential Extended Care program after my Inpatient experience and the program was a true catalyst in facilitating my gradual reintegration back into normal every day life in a safe, secure environment that provided me the support to deal with the issues in transitioning that are often the causes of relapse in the early recovery process. The Alumni Recovery Support services provided me the opportunity and resources to stay connected to the recovery process through educational, recreational and individual support engagement once I left the residential setting. What resonated with me the most was that at no time did I feel like a \'patient\'. The staff treated me with dignity and respect as an equal that was seeking help. I am truly grateful that I had the opportunity to be a client of the CeDAR addiction treatment program.