Seven Counties Services is a Community Mental Health Center that offers a full range of mental and behavioral health services, substance abuse treatment, and intellectual and developmental disabilities services in a seven-county region in Kentucky. Counties served include Jefferson, Oldham, Bullitt, Shelby, Spencer, Trimble, and Henry.
Seven Counties Services is fully accredited by The Joint Commission. With more than 1,300 staff members serving around 30,000 people annually, we continually help our community flourish...one life at a time.
TRILOGY provides people across Chicago with support to recover from mental illness and move toward stability. We provide with an array of essential services and ongoing support so that people can live independently and thrive in the community.
Our mission is to enable people in mental health recovery to build meaningful and independent lives through comprehensive and integrated care. We envision a society where everyone impacted by mental illness is valued, embraced, and supported holistically, systematically, and culturally; where the stigma of mental illness is eliminated; and where quality of care is not determined by socioeconomic status.
TRILOGY is committed to ensuring mental healthcare is accessible to all, and we are increasing services to communities on Chicago’s South Side through our new location in the Chatham neighborhood.
Learn about our FREE Mental Health Awareness Trainings for your organization: MHAT@TrilogyInc.org
FACT CRISIS LINE: 800.FACT.400
INTAKE LINE: 773.382.4060
https://linktr.ee/Trilogyinc
Lifespring was an American for-profit human potential organization founded in 1974 by John Hanley Sr., Robert White, Randy Revell, and Charlene Afremow. The organization encountered significant controversy in the 1970s and 1980s with various academic articles characterizing Lifespring's training methods as "deceptive and indirect techniques of persuasion and control", and allegations that Lifespring was a cult that used coercive methods to prevent members from leaving. After these allegations were highlighted in a 1987 article in the Washington Post as well as local television reporting in communities where Lifespring had a significant presence, Lifespring changed its name to the "Legacy Center." The Legacy Center was also met with controversy, and when it was under investigation by the North Carolina Attorney General's office for allegedly defrauding its members, it changed its name to the "Gratitude Center." Before becoming defunct in the mid 1990s, Lifespring claimed that it had trained more than 400,000 people through its ten centers across the United States.
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