Muckleshoot Indian Tribe Behavioral Health

17813 Southeast 392nd Street Auburn, WA 98092 | 253-804-8752

About Muckleshoot Indian Tribe Behavioral Health

Muckleshoot Indian Tribe Behavioral Health is a tribally directed healthcare organization providing state certified substance use disorder treatment and comprehensive mental health services to Native Americans on or near the Muckleshoot Indian Reservation in Auburn, Washington.

The program offers outpatient treatment, intensive outpatient groups, medication assisted treatment, equine assisted therapy and residential recovery housing for adults and youth.

Culturally relevant, trauma informed care honors the traditions and distinctive needs of the Muckleshoot community while integrating evidence based therapies with innovative clinical approaches.

Culturally Informed Substance Use and Mental Health Treatment

Muckleshoot Behavioral Health specializes in treating cooccurring substance use and mental health disorders for tribal members and Native American families.

The program provides comprehensive assessments, individual and group counseling, family therapy, case management and crisis intervention through a culturally safe tribal health system staffed by fully licensed clinicians.

Treatment incorporates evidence based approaches including cognitive behavioral therapy, dialectical behavioral therapy, motivational interviewing, trauma focused counseling and 12 step facilitation.

Flexible IOP groups meet mornings, afternoons, and evenings to accommodate work and family commitments with medication assisted treatment using Suboxone, Vivitrol and buprenorphine available typically within one to four  weeks of initial contact.

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253-804-8752
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17813 Southeast 392nd Street
Auburn, WA 98092
Reviewed by: Amy Greene

Amy Greene is an award-winning novelist and essayist. Her acclaimed debut novel, Bloodroot, was a New York Times national best seller. Her second novel, Long Man, was named a Best Book of the Year by The Washington Post in 2014. Her essays have appeared in publications such as The New York Times and Glamor Magazine. She currently resides in her native East Tennessee, amid the mountains she loves. In both her fiction and her nonfiction writing, Amy is dedicated exploring complex issues of mental health and spiritual and emotional wellbeing.

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