Upcoming Roundtables
A focused clinical conversation exploring how compassion and accountability can work together to create meaningful leverage that supports lasting recovery for men and their families.
Register
A forward looking clinical roundtable exploring how collaboration, integration, and evolving care models are shaping the future of complex addiction case management.
Register
A clinical roundtable exploring how to create durable recovery plans for high risk clients when relapse, fragmentation, and system fatigue threaten long term outcomes.
Register
Complex Cases Are Not Getting Simpler
Men are presenting with layered process addiction, trauma histories, family system breakdowns, relapse cycles, and fragmented care plans that often leave providers carrying the weight alone.
Even the most skilled clinicians feel the strain when systems are misaligned, communication breaks down, or long term care lacks continuity.
There is no shortage of effort.
There is a shortage of integration.
The Field Needs Better Conversations
Too often, professionals work in parallel instead of together.
Therapists. Physicians. Interventionists. Attorneys. Families. Individuals in recovery.
Everyone sees part of the picture.
Few spaces exist where those perspectives are brought together intentionally.
This roundtable exists to change that.
Not as a sales event.
Not as a presentation.
But as a professional dialogue.
How It Works
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Third Thursday of every month
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9:00am MST
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Live online roundtable
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Moderated discussion
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Curated audience Q&A
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Recording sent to registrants
Simple. Focused. Consistent.
More About The Roundtable
What This Roundtable Is
This is not a presentation or sales webinar.
It is a live, moderated virtual conversation with experienced professionals who are actively working with high acuity men and complex family systems.
The goal is shared learning, honest dialogue, and practical insight you can carry back into your work.
Who Should Attend
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Therapists and CSATs
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Interventionists and case managers
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Referral partners supporting complex male clients
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Clinical and program leaders shaping care models
- Family, friends, recovering addicts, and anyone else thats life has been affected by addiction
If you are regularly supporting clients where standard approaches fall short, this conversation is for you.

