Supporting resilience, function, and return to work
The Path Back Program: Mental Health High-Intensity Outpatient Program
Our Mental Health High-Intensive Outpatient Program or Path Back Program (PBP) is designed for individuals navigating mood, anxiety, trauma-related, or stress-induced disorders that are interfering with work and life function. Whether you’re struggling to keep up with daily responsibilities, navigating short- or long-term disability or going through a difficult life transition, this program provides the structure, skills, and therapeutic support you need to regain stability and move forward.
At Brick House Recovery Centre, we take a unique and innovative approach to helping people return to functioning after mental health or trauma-related challenges through our PBP Program. This model integrates the therapeutic intensity of our High-Intensity Outpatient Program (H-IOP) with structured return-to-work planning, workplace communication strategies, and functional skill building, ensuring treatment addresses both personal recovery and job readiness.
Research shows that IOPs can significantly reduce symptoms of depression, anxiety, and PTSD¹,². In addition, the best return-to-work outcomes occur when clinical treatment is paired with vocational support and coordinated planning³,⁴. The Enhanced Mental Health IOP at Brick House Recovery was built with this in mind, delivering evidence-based care that supports both recovery in function and a confident, sustainable return to the workplace.
Through the PBP program, individuals can build emotional resilience, master practical coping tools, and receive targeted support for workplace challenges so they can recover their sense of direction and confidently return to work and daily responsibilities.
Why Choose Brick House Recovery Centre?
A Comprehensive Approach
From
Addiction

Health
Care

Focused
Treatment

Accessible Services Throughout Alberta
Why Choose the Mental Health High-IOP?
Disability-Aware & Goal-Aligned
Return-to-Function Focus
Resilience-Centered Curriculum
Multidisciplinary, Evidence-Based Care
What You’ll Learn in the Mental Health H-IOP
- How to manage stress and anxiety in high-pressure environments
- Skills for emotional regulation and mental endurance
- Strategies for maintaining workplace boundaries and communication
- Techniques to reduce cognitive overload and improve focus
- Confidence-building and structured re-engagement planning
- Relapse prevention for mood and functional setbacks
Is This Program Right for Me?
The Mental Health H-IOP may be a fit if:
- You’re on short- or long-term disability due to mental health issues
- You’re feeling stuck or overwhelmed trying to get back to work
- You need more support than weekly therapy, but don’t require inpatient care
- You want to build resilience and regain control of your daily routine
- You’re motivated to learn practical skills to function better in work and life
Program Structure
Duration: 4, 8 & 12-week options based on individual clinical needs and return-to-work goals.
Schedule: 5 days/week, Full-Day Programming.
Format Includes:
Enhanced Programming
Weekly Individual Clinical Review
Integrated Case Coordination
Focused Return to Function Supports
Next Steps
References
- Shiner, B., Wray, L. O., McCutcheon, S. J., & Dally, S. K. (2022). Intensive outpatient treatment for depression in veterans: Outcomes and predictors of improvement. Journal of Affective Disorders, 297, 607–614. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jad.2021.10.016
- Haagen, J. F. G., Ter Heide, F. J. J., Mooren, T. T. M., Knipscheer, J. W., & Kleber, R. J. (2024). Effectiveness of intensive outpatient programs for PTSD: A systematic review. European Journal of Psychotraumatology, 15(1), 2337613. https://doi.org/10.1080/20008198.2024.2337613
- Kearns, N. T., Wozniak, K., & McGonagle, A. K. (2024). Coordinated return-to-work programs for employees with mental health conditions: A systematic review. Journal of Occupational Rehabilitation, 34(1), 45–62. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10926-023-10064-9
- Blank, L., Baxter, S., Goyder, E., Naylor, P., & Walters, S. (2023). Vocational interventions for people with mental health problems: A systematic review and meta-analysis. Occupational Medicine, 73(1)