This center offers
outpatient mental health services for children, youth, and families. They treat psychiatric, behavioral, emotional, learning, trauma-related challenges, and
dual diagnosis conditions through individual, family, and
group therapy, supported by medication management and psychological testing. The clinic uses therapies such as trauma-focused
cognitive behavioral therapy (TFCBT), child-parent psychotherapy (CPP), eye movement desensitization and reprocessing (EMDR), and registered play therapy. The center helps clients heal from trauma, improve emotional regulation, and build healthier relationships.
Kaleidoscope Grief Center, a program of Methodist Family Health, serves grieving children, teens, and families in Arkansas. The center offers peer support bereavement groups, grief counseling, and Camp Healing Hearts, a free family-oriented grief camp that helps children and families develop coping skills in a safe environment. Kaleidoscope also provides social events and licensed bereavement counseling to support healing and emotional growth after the loss of a loved one.
Their distinctive Teaching-Family Model program provides a family-like environment with small groups and Teaching-Parents who deliver supportive, consistent guidance. This proven behavioral intervention, developed over 40 years, is especially effective for at-risk youth, including those in foster care or juvenile justice. It is unique in Arkansas for its comprehensive use throughout the continuum of care and empowers young minds to build resilience and positive life skills.
Evidence-Based Context: According to SAMHSA's National Survey on Drug Use and Health (2023), approximately 48.7 million Americans aged 12 or older had a substance use disorder in the past year. The National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) emphasizes that treatment programs combining behavioral therapy with medication-assisted approaches show the highest rates of sustained recovery. Facilities like Methodist Family Health - Little Rock Counseling Clinic provide structured pathways to evidence-based care.
Sources: SAMHSA NSDUH 2023, NIDA Principles of Drug Addiction Treatment (4th Ed.)