CONTACT US: 602-932-3436
This intensive level of care isn't a starting point. It’s a bridge for when traditional methods haven't quite met your family’s needs.
Jason explains that this program is typically designed for kiddos experiencing:
School Refusal: The anxiety of the school day has become an impassable barrier.
Treatment-Resistant Depression: You’ve tried medication and it’s not working; you’ve tried individual or group therapy and haven’t seen progress.
Transitions: Your kid has just been discharged from a residential treatment center and needs a step-down process from 24/7 care.
If any of these resonate, this program may provide the immersive environment your child needs to shift from simply surviving to thriving.
The Rosemary Tree’s Adolescent PHP (Partial Hospitalization Program) offers a powerful path to healing for teens who need more than weekly therapy, without the need for overnight stays.
This five-day-a-week program provides 20+ hours of therapeutic care, blending clinical excellence with creative, play-based modalities that teens actually connect with. We guide them through emotional highs and lows using evidence-based practices like DBT, EMDR, and family systems therapy, all in a setting that feels more like a supportive community than a clinical environment.

The Partial Hospitalization Program (PHP) offers a structured, intensive mental health treatment option foradolescents. Operating five days a week, PHP provides the support of a hospital program without overnightstays. It helps clients balance recovery with daily life, promoting independence and resilience.
Participants receive at least 20 hours of care weekly, including personalized therapy for the individual and family, academic guidance, and psychiatric support. Our program utilizes a variety of modalities including dialectical behavior therapy (DBT), family systems, and trauma-informed care (EMDR).
The program fosters a sense of community, where clients connect and support each other in their journey to recovery. We ensure a smooth transition to less intensive services, like our Intensive Outpatient Program (IOP), to support long-term recovery and independence.
Our program is catered to teens and adolescents who are facing the following:
Anxiety
Depression
Trauma
Emotional disregulation
Our program is catered to teens and adolescents who need:
Structured support beyond what outpatient therapy provides
An alternative to full inpatient care.
Whether your teen is struggling silently or in crisis, our team is here to meet them exactly where they are — and help them move forward.
PHP provides the support of a hospital program without overnight stays. It helps clients balance recovery with daily life, promoting independence and resilience.
Structured Schedule of Intensive care
Our program is five days a week with 22 hours of care weekly, including:
Academic support
Teen group
Individual sessions
Family sessions
Parent group
Rooted in Multiple Clinical Approaches
Our program utilizes a variety of modalities including:
DBT
EMDR
Family systems
Trauma-informed care
To increase emotional regulation, people skills, distress tolerance, and lasting healing.
Program Hours
Monday 10:00 - 3:00
Tuesday 10:00 - 3:00
Wednesday 10:00 –3:00
Thursday 10:00 - 3:00
Friday 10:00 -12:00
Personalized Therapy Plans
No one-size-fits-all approach. Every teen gets a tailored roadmap for healing — and a team that’s truly in their corner.
Whole-Family Support
We believe healing is a family journey. Through parent groups and family sessions, we equip caregivers with the tools to better connect, support, and communicate with their teen.
Creative + Clinical Healing
Our approach integrates play, nature, movement, and expression. It’s not just therapy, it’s transformation.
Academic & Life Balance
Teens stay engaged with school while building emotional resilience. We provide academic support so they don’t fall behind during their healing process

Many parents describe the same experience. Their adolescent used to be open, affectionate, or engaged. Now, conversations feel shorter. Responses feel distant. Attempts to connect are met with irritation, silence, or withdrawal.
This shift can feel personal, but in many cases, it reflects deeper changes in adolescent mental health and family dynamics.
For parents seeking adolescent therapy, understanding why this push-away dynamic happens is an important first step in rebuilding connection.
Adolescence is a time of increasing independence, identity development, and emotional complexity. Teens often feel the need to separate from their parents while still relying on them for support.
This can create a push-pull dynamic:
Adolescents want space but also need connection
They seek independence but still need guidance
They test boundaries while still needing stability
When stress, anxiety, or emotional overwhelm is present, this dynamic can intensify. Instead of communicating needs clearly, adolescents may withdraw, shut down, or react defensively.
The National Institute of Mental Health explains that adolescent mental health challenges often show up through behavioral and emotional changes rather than direct communication:
https://www.nimh.nih.gov/health/topics/child-and-adolescent-mental-health
When adolescent disconnection begins to show up, families often adapt quickly, sometimes without realizing how the pattern is forming.
Parents may:
Try harder to connect, leading to more resistance
Pull back to avoid conflict
Become more directive or controlling
Feel rejected or unsure how to respond
Adolescents may:
Feel misunderstood or pressured
Withdraw further
Escalate emotionally to be heard
This pattern can create ongoing tension within the home. Over time, it impacts family dynamics and teen mental health, making communication more difficult and increasing emotional distance.
A family systems therapy adolescents approach helps families understand how these cycles develop and how each response influences the system. Instead of focusing on one person, the goal is to shift the interaction pattern itself.
A family systems perspective emphasizes how relational patterns shape behavior over time:
https://www.newportacademy.com/resources/restoring-families/family-systems-approach/
In weekly sessions, families often talk about communication challenges, but may not have enough time to practice new ways of interacting in real-time.
Disconnection is not just about what is said. It is about tone, timing, emotional regulation, and how each person responds under stress.
Many approaches that address disconnection use trauma informed family therapy, which focuses on emotional safety, regulation, and pacing. This allows adolescents to feel less pressured and more open to reconnecting.
Research shows that family-based interventions improve outcomes in adolescent mental health treatment, particularly when patterns are addressed at the system level:
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC3937265/
This is one reason families begin exploring family therapy intensives, where there is more time and structure to repair connection patterns.
If your adolescent is struggling with disconnection, withdrawal, or communication breakdown, choosing the right level of care is essential.
For families exploring family therapy for adolescents Arizona, The Rosemary Tree offers multiple levels of care depending on the situation, including intensive family therapy Arizona when deeper intervention is needed.
Teen DBT Group Therapy
Supports adolescents in developing emotional regulation, communication, and interpersonal effectiveness skills.
https://therosemarytree.org/teen-dbt-group-therapy
Teen Intensive Outpatient Program (IOP)
Provides structured support while allowing adolescents to remain at home and continue school.
https://therosemarytree.org/phoenix-intensive-outpatient-program
Partial Hospitalization Program (PHP)
Offers a higher level of care for adolescents needing consistent daily therapeutic support.
https://therosemarytree.org/partial-hospitalization-program-phoenix-az
Accelerated Outcomes Therapy (Intensives)
Family therapy intensives provide focused, short-term support that helps families rebuild connection and address patterns that are not shifting in weekly therapy.
https://therosemarytree.org/intensive-therapy-phoenix-az
If you are unsure which option is right for your family, you can start by reaching out through the contact form:
https://therosemarytree.org/contact
When an adolescent pushes you away, it does not mean the relationship is lost. It often means the way connection is being attempted needs to shift.
By understanding the patterns driving disconnection and choosing the right level of support, families can begin rebuilding trust, improving communication, and creating a more stable and connected environment.
We offer our services in an intentionally home-like environment at our residential-style treatment center in Arizona. Our goal is to create a space where adolescents feel comfortable—not clinical—while receiving care at our facility for adolescents.






The Rosemary Tree operates residential treatment centers for youth in Arizona, offering specialized care for a variety of personal and relational challenges. Through our residential treatment facility for adolescents, we provide inpatient residential care, outpatient intensives, marriage and relationship counseling, family counseling, individual counseling, and more.
Our partial hospitalization program in Phoenix, intensive outpatient program in Phoenix (IOP), and DBT therapy programs are among the most clinically effective in the state. As a trusted residential treatment Arizona provider, we offer an intensive outpatient program in Phoenix, AZ, designed to support individuals needing structured care while maintaining daily responsibilities. Our specialized IOP for adolescents and IOP for youth provide tailored therapeutic approaches, ensuring young individuals receive the guidance and support they need. We integrate evidence-based treatments such as Narrative Therapy, Dialectical Behavioral Therapy (DBT), Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR), Internal Family Systems (IFS), Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT), Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT), Restoration Therapy (RT), Sensorimotor, Gestalt, and Art Therapy, among many others.

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