词条 | Cenikor Foundation |
释义 |
| name = Cenikor Foundation | logo = Cenikor Logo Blue with tagline.jpg | logo_size = 225px | type = Non-profit | genre = Behavioral health, drug and alcohol addiction, mental illness and intervention | foundation = Lakewood, Colorado, U.S. ({{Start date|1967}}) | location_city = Houston, TX, Texas | locations = 7 facilities | key_people = Bill Bailey (President and CEO) Kellee Webb (VP of Human Resource) Matt Kuhlman (CFO) | num_employees = 300 (estimate) | homepage = {{URL|http://www.cenikor.org}} }} The Cenikor Foundation is a private, not-for-profit behavioral health organization based in Houston, Texas. It offers long-term residential, short-term residential, detoxification and outpatient behavioral health services for adults and adolescents.[1] Cenikor provides evidence-based therapeutic community addiction treatment through long-term residential programs in Baton Rouge, LA, Deer Park, TX and Fort Worth, TX and detox/short-term residential treatment in Waco, TX. Cenikor offers outpatient treatment services in Baton Rouge, LA, Temple, TX, Killeen, TX, and Waco, TX. Cenikor also has an adolescent residential facility in Houston, TX called Odyssey House Texas. History1960sIn 1967, inmates at the Colorado State Penitentiary founded Cenikor. The concept was based on group help and peer identification principals.[2] The inmates were committed to breaking the cycle of substance abuse and the criminal behavior that supports their addictions. With little funding, they were determined to reverse lives caught up in the cycle of addiction and develop a program that would show others how to become productive and responsible citizens.[3] 1970sAfter two years of operating an in-take facility in the Dallas/Fort Worth area, the Winn-Dixie Stores Inc. donated two 100,000 square feet buildings in Fort Worth in January 1979 to help Cenikor establish a north Texas treatment facility.[11] Cenikor residents did the work converting the warehouse and two office buildings into a livable facility that could house 180 residents. The first resident entered the facility for treatment on New Year's Eve 1979.[12] 1980sIn 1983, Cenikor received national recognition from the President of the United States, Ronald Reagan, when he visited the Houston facility on April 29. President Reagan commended Cenikor for its ability to operate without government funding, and for its success in enlisting support from the private sector.[13] Nancy Reagan visited the Lakewood, Colorado facility on Tuesday, Aug. 10, 1983 during the national anti-drug campaign.[14] Nancy Reagan also visited the Fort Worth facility in 1986 alongside Texas Governor-elect Bill Clements as she handed out diplomas to 11 graduates.[15] 1990sIn 1994, Cenikor's Houston facility moved from downtown Houston to Deer Park, a suburb in southeast Houston. The new facility, located in the former Deer Park Hospital, is on almost 20 acres of land and 80,000 square feet in size, housing 180 residents.[16] In 1995, Cenikor opened an outreach office in Baton Rouge, Louisiana in a space provided by the city. This location referred over 150 to the Texas facilities each year.[17] 2000s2007 marked 40 years of providing supportive residential therapeutic treatment services. Cenikor has impacted more than 40,000 lives and in 2007 had more than 500 residents in three long-term treatment facilities located in Deer Park, TX; Fort Worth, TX; and Baton Rouge, LA. In 2007, residents began attending college and vocational training programs in an effort to improve their quality of life while getting treatment at Cenikor.[18] In 2010, Cenikor formed a strategic alliance with Odyssey House Texas to provide therapeutic community treatment services to adolescents. In February 2011, Cenikor began serving Lake Charles residents in the former state-run Joseph R. Briscoe facility. The 34-bed short-term residential unit maintains a high occupancy rate. The 12-bed medically supported detoxification unit continues to receive referrals from across the state. On July 10, 2012 a ribbon cutting and open house was held for the new short-term residential facility in Waco. More than 200 people attended the event including Texas State Representative Charles "Doc" Anderson, Waco Mayor Malcolm Duncan, Waco District Attorney Abel Reyna, city councilmen, representatives from Hillcrest Baptist Medical Center executive staff and other community members. The facility began accepting clients on Monday, July 16 for short-term residential and Monday, July 23 for detoxification. LocationsCorporate office
Long-term adult residential facilities
Detoxification
Short-term adult residential facilities
Outpatient services
Adolescent residential
References1. ^"Cenikor Foundation hosts luncheon." Houston Chronicle, Sept. 10, 2008.] 2. ^[https://newspaperarchive.com/clovis-news-journal/1977-07-17/page-2?tag=cenikor&rtserp=tags/cenikor "Cenikor To Open Branch In State."] Clovis News Journal, July 17, 1977.] 3. ^[https://newspaperarchive.com/colorado-springs-gazette/1977-10-07/page-2?tag=cenikor&rtserp=tags/Cenikor "Cenikor Reaching Those Who Couldn’t Be Helped."] Colorado Springs Gazette, Oct. 7, 1977.] 4. ^{{cite web |url=http://www.khou.com/news/local/Historic-Jeff-Davis-Hospital-building-burns-in-overnight-fire-204654961.html |title=Archived copy |accessdate=2014-07-13 |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20140227235131/http://www.khou.com/news/local/Historic-Jeff-Davis-Hospital-building-burns-in-overnight-fire-204654961.html |archivedate=2014-02-27 |df= }} 5. ^"Cenikor-One Good Alternative", by Sherman Ross, The Houston Lawyer Magazine, September 1973 6. ^houstonist.com “Ask Houstonist:What’s that disappearing building?” 7. ^[https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=lKZOAAAAIBAJ&sjid=NPsDAAAAIBAJ&pg=6982,3733098&dq=cenikor&hl=en "Strike taking toll on cities’ finances."] Lakeland Ledger, July 11, 1981.] 8. ^[https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=WHI0AAAAIBAJ&sjid=zqQFAAAAIBAJ&pg=6110,4039607&dq=cenikor&hl=en "Brief."] The Montreal Gazette, June 19, 1981.] 9. ^"Cenikor: The last stop before prison", by Rosalind Jackler, The Houston Post, April 29, 1984. 10. ^"Cenikor residents help at rodeo", Suburbia-Reporter East, March 7, 1991. 11. ^"In Old Fort Worth: Where Kimbell Hung First Paintings", by Mack Williams, Fort Worth News Tribune, Jan. 19, 1979. 12. ^"Cenikor opens its doors for troubled people", by Carolyn Ondrejas, Fort Worth Star-Telegram, Jan. 3, 1980 Evening Edition. 13. ^"President pays visit to Cenikor facility, praises center’s work", by Jim Simmon, Houston Chronicle, April 30, 1983. 14. ^"Red Carpet Greets Mrs. Reagan", by Diane Eicher, The Denver Post, Aug. 10,1983. 15. ^"First lady gives diplomas to grads of drug rehabilitation program", Houston Chronicle, Feb. 19, 1986. 16. ^"Reaching out: Cenikor creates downtown facility to expand services", by Bernadette Gillece, Houston Chronicle, Dec. 14, 1994. 17. ^"'One Day at a Time'", by Chante Dionne Warren, Baton Rouge Advocate, Dec. 7, 1996. 18. ^"Cenikor celebrates 40 years of changing lives", by Carla Rabalais, Houston Chronicle, Oct. 25, 2007. External links{{Div col|colwidth=30em}}
4 : Therapeutic community|Addiction organizations in the United States|Non-profit organizations based in Houston|Mental health organizations in Texas |
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