When people search for outpatient addiction treatment in Colorado, they usually want one clear answer. At CMAR, that answer starts with a full clinical assessment and a realistic look at daily life.
Michael Damioli, COO and Chief Clinical Officer at CMAR, explains that placement is not guesswork. He says the team looks at safety, stability, treatment history, and what a person can actually sustain during outpatient care.
CMAR Matches Care To The Person
Damioli says the process begins before admission and continues through the intake process. He explains, “We try to assess somebody on the pre-admission phase of treatment, as well as we do a comprehensive biopsychosocial assessment during intake that allows us to assess what level of care somebody needs.” That assessment looks beyond substance use alone.
CMAR also reviews home life, medical needs, mental health symptoms, relapse patterns, and outside stressors.
That means CMAR weighs several factors at once.
- Clinical need
- Home stability
- Work obligations
- Family responsibilities
- Past treatment outcomes
- Ability to attend consistently
That approach aligns with ASAM’s guidance on individualized pathways. It also helps CMAR avoid a one-size-fits-all placement model.

What PHP, IOP, And Weekly Outpatient Usually Mean
The main difference between levels of care is the amount of structure and support across the week. The right fit depends on how much accountability and clinical contact a person needs early on.
At a basic level, the structure usually looks like this.
- PHP offers the highest outpatient support, often around six hours a day, five days a week
- IOP five usually means five group days each week
- IOP three usually means three group days each week
- Weekly outpatient gives less frequent clinical contact for people with more stability
Damioli describes PHP as the most supportive outpatient level. He says, “For somebody in that situation, we would try to get them started in our PHP level of care, that’s the most supportive level of care that we have.”
He also explains why that matters after detox. “Stepping down slowly from such a structured treatment like detox, into outpatient, going slowly and having all the support you can possibly get is the best thing possible.”
That step-down structure makes sense for people moving from stabilization into a longer outpatient recovery program. It gives them more support before they taper down to less frequent care.
What The First Month Of Outpatient Treatment Often Looks Like
The first month is usually about rhythm, accountability, and follow-through. CMAR uses that period to help patients settle into a treatment cadence that feels structured but manageable.
Damioli says a typical IOP week includes education and group process. He explains, “The group is three hours long. It’s a combination of some psychoeducation, so learning something about addiction recovery or learning something about mental health, as well as processing.”
That early treatment cadence may include several moving parts.
- Group sessions multiple times each week
- Individual therapy
- Case management or care management
- Medication appointments
- Drug or breath testing when clinically indicated
- Peer support and alumni connection
Damioli says individual therapy gives people room to talk through issues that may not fit a group setting. He describes it as time to process trauma, private struggles, and other personal issues that affect recovery.
How CMAR Decides When Someone Needs More Support
Not everyone starts at the same level. Some patients need PHP right away, while others can begin at IOP or weekly outpatient and be monitored closely.
CMAR may provide more support when a patient shows signs such as these.
- Continued use or recent relapse
- Unstable home life
- Repeated unsuccessful outpatient attempts
- Stronger mental health symptoms
- Withdrawal risk or medical concerns
Damioli is especially careful about medical safety. He says he looks closely at alcohol and benzodiazepine use because withdrawal can be dangerous in those cases.
That is why safety has to shape placement decisions from the start. CMAR’s overview of how outpatient detox works gives more context for that early stage of care.
Progress Monitoring Should Feel Supportive, Not Punitive
This part of Damioli’s interview is especially useful because it directly addresses a common fear. Many patients hear words like accountability or testing and assume treatment is trying to punish them.
He says accountability is one of the biggest differences between treatment and informal support. He explains, “If something’s happening, if you’re not attending, if we have a concern about you, we will step up and say something. We will call you.”
That kind of support can include several things.
- Attendance follow-up
- Case manager outreach
- Schedule adjustments
- Medication check-ins
- Family or support-system contact when appropriate
For some patients, medication support is part of that structure. CMAR’s Suboxone MAT program is one example of how medical care can fit into a broader outpatient plan.

Why People Often Struggle Early In Outpatient Care
The first month can be the hardest part of treatment. People are trying to change routines, manage cravings, show up consistently, and handle the same life stress they were already carrying before treatment began.
Damioli says early struggles are common, and the team tries to respond instead of shame. He explains, “If there are barriers to accessing care that we can help that person remove, we’ll do that.”
Those barriers often look practical before they look clinical.
- Scheduling conflicts
- Work pressure
- Family demands
- Transportation issues
- Shame after relapse
- Trouble staying organized
When someone misses sessions, CMAR does not just mark them down and move on. Damioli says the first step is a conversation about what is getting in the way and how the team can help remove it.
What Better Outcomes Actually Look Like
Damioli says treatment success is bigger than simple abstinence. He wants to know whether a person is functioning better in daily life. That broader definition of progress aligns with NIDA’s recovery framework.
He explains that the team looks at general life improvement, not just last use. That includes relationships, work performance, emotional regulation, community connection, and physical well-being.
His summary is one of the clearest lines in the interview. “Drugs and alcohol are just the start of recovery. Learning to live a happy, healthy life is what it’s really all about.”
It also reflects how SAMHSA describes treatment and support, in which long-term recovery includes health, function, and stability.
Why The Right Level Of Care Matters
The wrong level of care can leave someone overwhelmed or under-supported. The right level gives them enough structure to stay engaged and enough flexibility to keep moving through daily life. That is the main takeaway from Damioli’s interview. CMAR chooses outpatient addiction treatment in Colorado by looking at the full picture rather than one symptom or one preference.
PHP, IOP, and weekly outpatient all have a role in recovery. The key question is which level provides the patient with enough support, accountability, and clinical oversight to build momentum in the first month.
That is what makes placement decisions matter. They shape not only the schedule, but also the odds that someone will keep showing up, stay connected, and move forward in care that fits both their needs and their real life.