
Meet our clinical team at BetterChoice Treatment Center — Addiction care experts in Las Vegas
This page introduces the clinical team at BetterChoice Treatment Center and explains how our medical and therapeutic staff support recovery through evidence-based care and coordinated services. You’ll find clear descriptions of the roles on a multidisciplinary addiction team, which qualifications matter for safe detox and therapy, and how our services — medical detox, inpatient rehab, outpatient programs, and counseling — fit together into a straightforward path to recovery. Seeking care can feel overwhelming; this guide breaks intake steps, typical timelines, and what to expect during initial assessments into practical, easy-to-follow information. We also outline quality and safety safeguards, how we identify and treat co-occurring mental health needs, and ways families are included in planning and aftercare. If you’re looking for licensed addiction therapists, a medical director experienced in addiction medicine, or certified counselors in Nevada, this guide clarifies roles and next steps so you can move from uncertainty to a confident decision.
Who makes up the BetterChoice clinical team?
Our team brings together medical, clinical, and support professionals who work as a coordinated unit to manage withdrawal, stabilize health, deliver therapy, and plan lasting recovery. Team members collaborate to keep detox safe, design individualized treatment during inpatient care, and support smooth transitions into outpatient programs — all of which help improve continuity and outcomes. Core roles include medical leadership, clinical program oversight, licensed therapists and counselors, nursing staff, and quality assurance staff who monitor standards. Below we describe each role and how they work together to support recovery.
The team typically includes the following core roles and responsibilities:
- Medical Director: Oversees medical detox protocols, advises on medication-assisted treatment, and sets clinical guidelines.
- Clinical Director / LMFT: Manages therapeutic programming, supervises clinical staff, and guides treatment planning.
- Licensed Therapists & Counselors: Provide individual therapy, group sessions, family therapy, and discharge planning.
- Nursing and Medical Staff: Monitor withdrawal safety, administer medications, and manage day-to-day medical care.
- Quality Assurance: Tracks outcomes, ensures compliance, and drives continuous program improvement.
What do our medical and clinical leaders do?
Medical and clinical leaders set the protocols and standards that keep care safe and effective. The Medical Director handles decisions related to detox, medication management, and how medical care integrates with therapy to ensure withdrawal care follows accepted safety criteria. The Clinical Director shapes program design, supervises therapists, selects evidence-based approaches, and oversees the quality of therapeutic services so treatment plans stay individualized and goal-focused.
Leaders are involved at key moments — admission to medical detox, transfers into inpatient rehab, and reviews of complex dual-diagnosis cases — to keep medical stabilization and therapy aligned. Clear leadership roles also support staff training, adherence to best-practice guidelines, and coordination with nursing for risk management. This structure reduces risk and helps patients move from acute stabilization into longer-term recovery supports.
Which therapists and counselors support recovery?
Licensed therapists and certified counselors do the day-to-day therapeutic work that builds insight, coping skills, relapse prevention, and family reintegration. Many clinicians hold licenses such as LMFT, LPC, or LCSW and addiction-specific certifications like CADC-I. They assess individual needs, provide cognitive and behavioral therapies, lead groups, and develop discharge and aftercare plans tailored to each person. Counselors complete biopsychosocial assessments, look for trauma and co-occurring conditions, and coordinate with medical staff so therapy aligns with any medication-assisted strategies.
Therapists teach practical relapse-prevention skills, coping strategies, and behavioral activation while receiving supervision from the Clinical Director to ensure treatment stays evidence-based and effective. This collaborative model lets the team adjust care when progress stalls or when extra supports are needed.
What qualifications and certifications do our addiction experts hold?

Knowing professional credentials helps families and patients assess clinical competence and safety. Credentials indicate scope of practice and training: physicians provide medical oversight, licensed therapists provide psychotherapy, and certified addiction counselors offer specialized skills for substance use disorders. Credentials are also tied to regulatory oversight and facility accreditation, which together set measurable standards for patient safety and program quality.
| Role | Common Credential | What they do |
|---|---|---|
| Medical Director | MD or DO; often board-certified | Oversees medical detox, advises on medications, and integrates medical care with therapy |
| Clinical Director | LMFT, LPC, LCSW or equivalent clinical license | Supervises clinical programs, treatment planning, and clinician training |
| Therapists & Counselors | LMFT, LPC, LCSW, CADC-I | Deliver individual, group, and family therapy; CADC-I shows addiction-focused training |
| Nursing Staff | RN or LPN | Handle medication, monitor withdrawal, and provide day-to-day medical care |
| Quality Assurance Lead | Quality/compliance certification or equivalent experience | Manages audits, tracks outcomes, and prepares for accreditation |
What medical credentials does our Medical Director hold?
Medical Directors at addiction programs usually hold an MD or DO, maintain state medical licensure, and often have board certification or clinical experience in addiction medicine, internal medicine, or psychiatry. These qualifications allow a physician to interpret tests, lead detox protocols, make medication-assisted treatment decisions, and consult on complex medical–psychiatric issues.
These medical credentials matter because they define the physician’s authority to prescribe, manage complications, and approve medical aspects of discharge and follow-up care. Combined with clinical leadership and therapy teams, medical expertise helps ensure treatment plans are both medically sound and therapeutically coherent.
What licenses and certifications do our therapists and counselors hold?
Therapists and counselors in evidence-based addiction care commonly hold state licenses such as LMFT, LPC, or LCSW and often hold addiction certifications like CADC-I. Licenses govern the scope of clinical practice — psychotherapy, diagnosis, and treatment planning — while CADC training indicates specialized skills in assessment, relapse prevention, and group work. Continuing education and supervision are part of maintaining these credentials and staying current with trauma-informed and dual-diagnosis care.
For families and patients, verifying a clinician’s license and any CADC credential provides reassurance that the clinician is qualified to address substance use and co-occurring mental health conditions. Regular supervision from the Clinical Director further supports accountable, high-quality care.
How does our clinical team deliver evidence-based, personalized treatment?
Effective addiction care starts with assessment-driven planning and coordination across medical and therapeutic services so each person gets the right level of care at the right time. We use structured intake assessments to measure severity, medical risk, and psychiatric needs. That assessment shapes the treatment pathway — medical detox when needed, inpatient stabilization, then step-down to outpatient or intensive outpatient services with ongoing counseling. We select evidence-based approaches like cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), motivational enhancement therapy (MET), DBT-informed strategies, and trauma-informed care based on assessment findings and patient goals.
| Service Component | Typical Length | Overseen By |
|---|---|---|
| Medical Detox | 3–7 days (varies by clinical need) | Medical Director & Nursing Staff |
| Inpatient Rehab | 7–30+ days depending on level of care | Clinical Director & Therapy Team |
| Outpatient Programs | Weekly sessions to several months | Therapists & Case Managers |
| Individual/Family Therapy | Session-based, ongoing | Licensed Therapists / Counselors |
Which evidence-based therapies does our team provide?

Our team uses a range of proven therapies to treat substance use and the underlying issues that contribute to it. Common approaches include CBT for skills and relapse prevention, MET to build motivation, DBT-informed techniques for emotion regulation, and trauma-informed care for those with trauma histories. When appropriate, medical staff may offer medication-assisted treatment (MAT) to reduce withdrawal risk and support stabilization.
Medical clinicians manage the physical aspects and medications, while therapists deliver structured psychotherapies in individual and group formats. That coordination ensures therapy and medical care work together for a whole-person, research-supported approach.
How do we treat co-occurring mental health and substance use disorders?
Integrated care starts with careful screening for depression, anxiety, PTSD, and other psychiatric conditions at intake, because co-occurring disorders change treatment decisions and medication choices. When screens indicate co-occurrence, the team builds a coordinated plan that blends psychotherapy for both conditions, psychiatric consultation for meds, and ongoing monitoring to adapt care as symptoms change. Regular case conferences among the Medical Director, Clinical Director, therapists, and nursing staff support shared decision-making and consistent communication with the patient and family.
Integrated treatment reduces fragmentation: behavioral strategies and pharmacotherapy are aligned, relapse triggers are assessed alongside mood and trauma factors, and aftercare plans include both mental health follow-up and substance-use supports. This coordinated approach improves engagement and lowers the risk of relapse tied to untreated psychiatric symptoms.
How does BetterChoice ensure quality, safety, and patient-centered care?
We protect quality, safety, and patient-centeredness through accreditation, ongoing quality assurance, standardized protocols, and strict privacy practices. Accreditation and credentialing set baseline expectations for clinical competence and safety. Internally, QA activities — audits, outcomes tracking, clinical supervision, and staff training — monitor performance and guide continuous improvement so our care stays current and effective.
These accreditations and oversight systems support measurable quality goals and help reassure patients and families that care is held to recognized standards.
What does Quality Assurance do in our programs?
Quality assurance is the backbone that measures compliance, clinical outcomes, and staff performance to keep treatment aligned with accepted standards. QA tasks include chart audits, outcome monitoring, staff competency checks, and preparing materials for external accreditation. At BetterChoice, a dedicated QA lead coordinates these activities and works with regulatory and accrediting bodies to ensure ongoing compliance and improvement.
Regular QA cycles reveal gaps, guide staff training, and support data-driven program changes; this continuous oversight helps deliver safer, more consistent, patient-centered services that meet accreditation expectations.
How do we protect confidentiality and comfort in our setting?
We maintain confidentiality through standard privacy protections, secure record-keeping, and staff training on patient privacy. Clinical staff prioritize respectful communication, private spaces for individual therapy and medical evaluations, and procedures that limit unnecessary disclosures while allowing family involvement when the patient consents.
Clear consent processes and professional privacy practices make it possible to include family support in a way that respects patient dignity and therapeutic boundaries.
Why trust the BetterChoice clinical team?
Trust grows from proven competence, clear processes, and transparent communication about what to expect at each stage of care. Our focus on evidence-based therapies, coordinated medical oversight, and QA monitoring creates predictable pathways from intake through aftercare. For families, knowing who leads medical decisions, who provides therapy, and how we measure quality sets realistic expectations and encourages collaboration during treatment planning and discharge.
This mix of clear roles, verifiable credentials, and patient-centered practices helps families feel informed and supported while honoring patient autonomy and clinical judgment.
What guides our clinical team’s experience and philosophy?
We center care on personalized, evidence-based treatment that combines medical stabilization with psychotherapy and social supports to treat the whole person. Clinicians use trauma-informed, recovery-oriented practices that assess readiness, tailor interventions, and emphasize skills-building and relapse prevention. Collaborative decision-making and continuity of care are core principles: the team aligns medical, therapeutic, and case management services around each patient’s goals.
These principles shape daily clinical choices and promote measurable progress while allowing flexibility as individuals respond to treatment.
How do we support families during treatment?
Family support begins at intake with education on levels of care, confidentiality limits, and how family involvement can help when appropriate. We offer family sessions, structured education on substance use and relapse prevention, and coaching on communication and boundaries to help relatives support a loved one’s move into aftercare. Scheduled family meetings and clear communication expectations define helpful roles while protecting therapeutic boundaries and patient confidentiality.
Family-focused resources and practical next steps empower relatives to participate constructively in recovery planning and to prepare for life after discharge.
How do you connect with our clinical team at BetterChoice?
Contacting our clinical team follows clear, practical steps designed to reduce uncertainty and speed access to the right level of care. Most connections start with a brief phone call to review immediate needs and any medical risk, followed by an intake assessment to determine clinical severity, co-occurring conditions, and level-of-care recommendations. Insurance verification and benefits checks can usually be completed during or shortly after that first conversation to clarify coverage and any out-of-pocket costs. Admissions proceed based on assessment results, medical stability, and bed availability; our staff will explain next steps and required paperwork.
| Action | What to Expect | Timeframe |
|---|---|---|
| Initial Phone Consultation | Short clinical screen and documentation of immediate needs | Same day to 48 hours |
| Clinical Assessment | Full biopsychosocial evaluation and level-of-care recommendation | 24–72 hours after initial contact |
| Insurance Verification | Benefits check and clarification of covered services | Typically within 24–72 hours |
| Admission & Paperwork | Scheduling, medical clearance, and arrival instructions | Variable based on availability; staff will provide a timeline |
Where can you learn more about individual team members?
Individual staff profiles explain each clinician’s role, credentials, specialties, and the services they lead so patients and families can match needs with provider expertise. Reviewing profiles before intake helps callers prepare specific questions about therapy approaches, dual-diagnosis care, or who oversees medical detox. Profiles also note which clinicians supervise therapy groups and run family sessions, which makes expectations clearer for coordination and continuity.
Reading these profiles before a consultation helps you prioritize questions and makes intake conversations more productive.
How do you contact our team for consultations or admissions?
To request a consultation or start admissions, have a brief clinical history, current medication list, and insurance details ready if possible so staff can do an initial screen and benefits check. Useful first-call questions include asking who will oversee medical detox, which therapists handle individual and family therapy, and what the next steps are for assessment and admission. After the call, expect scheduling for a detailed clinical assessment, insurance verification, and instructions for any medical clearance needed before admission.
- Who will be my primary clinical contact? Ask to identify the Medical Director or Clinical Director.
- What level of care do you recommend? Clarify whether inpatient, outpatient, or medical detox is most appropriate.
- What documentation should I have ready? Verify insurance details, medication lists, and recent medical records.
These questions and steps help callers move efficiently through intake and let our clinical team recommend the safest, most appropriate care pathway.
This page described team roles, credentials, treatment pathways, safety and quality measures, family supports, and practical steps to connect with our clinical staff. If you’re evaluating options in Nevada, use the role and credential information above to guide intake questions and ensure care aligns with medical and therapeutic needs. For immediate contact and directions, use the center’s publicly listed phone number and address to reach admissions and request the next available assessment.
Frequently Asked Questions
What should I expect during the intake assessment process?
During intake you’ll receive a thorough evaluation that usually includes a biopsychosocial assessment. The full assessment typically occurs within 24 to 72 hours after initial contact. We’ll review medical history, substance use patterns, mental health concerns, and prior treatment to determine severity and recommend the appropriate level of care. The goal is to create a personalized plan that addresses your needs and safety.
How does BetterChoice support aftercare planning?
Aftercare planning is an essential part of recovery. Our clinical team works with each patient to build a discharge plan that may include outpatient therapy, support groups, medication management, and community resources. Family involvement is encouraged when appropriate to strengthen support systems and improve long-term outcomes. Plans are tailored to the individual’s needs and updated as those needs change.
What types of insurance does BetterChoice accept?
We accept a variety of insurance plans, but coverage varies by policy. It’s best to verify benefits during the initial phone consultation. Our admissions team can help explain what services are covered and any expected out-of-pocket costs so you understand your financial responsibilities before starting care.
How does the center ensure patient safety during detox?
Patient safety during detox is a top priority. Our medical team, led by the Medical Director, closely monitors patients during withdrawal, provides medications as clinically indicated, and performs regular health checks to ensure stability. The facility is prepared for medical emergencies, and nursing staff are trained to respond quickly to complications to maintain a safe, supportive detox environment.
Can family members participate in therapy sessions?
Yes. Family involvement is an important part of the recovery process. We offer family therapy and education to help relatives understand addiction, improve communication, and set healthy boundaries. Participation is based on the patient’s consent and the clinical goals established during treatment.
What is the typical duration of treatment?
Treatment length varies by individual needs and level of care. Medical detox often lasts 3–7 days. Inpatient rehab typically ranges from 7 to 30 days or more, depending on clinical needs. Outpatient programs can continue for several months with weekly sessions. Our team continually assesses progress to determine the appropriate length of stay and next steps.
How can I prepare for my first visit?
Before your first visit, gather medical history, a current medication list, and insurance information if available. Writing down questions or concerns can help guide the intake conversation. Providing this information ahead of time helps the clinical team perform a thorough initial screening and recommend the most appropriate care.
Conclusion
Knowing who makes up our clinical team and what they do helps you make informed choices about addiction treatment. Our multidisciplinary approach combines medical stabilization, evidence-based therapy, and practical supports to address substance use and co-occurring mental health needs. Reach out to connect with our dedicated staff and take the next step toward a recovery plan that’s tailored to you or your loved one.