The Wellbeing & Recovery Collective (TWRC) is a UK-based online mental health service that offers flexible, trauma-informed care. It provides therapy, group work, and structured recovery programmes for individuals facing eating disorders, addiction, and co-occurring mental health conditions. Services are delivered remotely by experienced professionals and are available to both adults and young people.
TWRC offers a range of services tailored to address various mental health concerns, including individual therapy, coaching, group support, treatment programmes, and alternative therapies. They specialise in areas such as eating disorders, addiction, and life challenges, providing expert assessments, psychiatric referrals, and comprehensive case management. TWRC supports individuals at various stages of their recovery journey—whether stabilising after a relapse, transitioning from inpatient treatment, or seeking to deepen long-term recovery.
TWRC offers specialised treatment programmes, such as a 16-week online intensive
outpatient programme (
IOP) for eating disorders and a 14-week online addiction recovery programme. These programs are designed to provide personalised care, including one-on-one therapy, nutritional support, dialectical behavior therapy (
DBT) groups, workshops, and aftercare, all structured to fit into participants' schedules. TWRC also fosters a supportive community through their free online platform, offering resources, articles, and discussions on mental health, recovery, and well-being, creating a safe space for individuals to connect and share experiences.
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 The Wellbeing & Recovery Collective provide structured pathways to evidence-based care.
Sources: SAMHSA NSDUH 2023, NIDA Principles of Drug Addiction Treatment (4th Ed.)