For Professionals
Thank you for considering Front Range Treatment Center for your client. Here's what we offer, how we coordinate with referring providers, and how to make a referral.
Referring a Client to FRTC
Front Range Treatment Center is a Linehan-Certified comprehensive DBT program in Greenwood Village, in the Denver Tech Center — one of fewer than 30 certified programs in the country. Alongside DBT, we offer CBT, psychological testing, and state-licensed psilocybin-assisted therapy under Colorado's Natural Medicine Health Act. We see clients in person and by secure video across Colorado. We welcome referrals for the full program, for our standalone skills group, for testing, or for natural-medicine services — and we'll tell you honestly when we're not the right fit.
What We Provide
Refer for whichever fits your client. Each links to the program detail.
Comprehensive DBT
The full Linehan model — individual therapy, skills group, phone coaching, and consultation team — for children, teens, and adults.
Learn more →CBT
Evidence-based cognitive-behavioral therapy for anxiety, depression, OCD, and trauma, including exposure-based protocols.
Learn more →Psychological Testing
Diagnostic clarification and comprehensive, ADHD, and autism evaluations from about age 10.
Learn more →Psilocybin Services
State-licensed psilocybin-assisted therapy (Prop 122) for adults 21+ — preparation, dosing, and integration.
Learn more →How We Coordinate With You
Because we're a DBT program, we coordinate care in a way that may differ from what you're used to — and it's worth naming up front. We keep your client at the center: coordinating with you is, by design, largely your client's job. They're adults, and learning to communicate with their own providers is part of the work — the interpersonal-effectiveness skill in vivo. We coach them to do it rather than doing it for them. In DBT terms this is the "consultation-to-the-client" approach.
In practice that means we won't hold meetings about your client without them present, and we don't operate as a back-channel for routine case updates — expect to hear how the work is going from your client, not from us. We'll coordinate with you directly only in specific situations: acute safety risk, a minor, a client who genuinely can't act when the outcome matters, an intransigent high-power system, or when it's plainly humane and carries no harm. It isn't standoffish — it's how DBT builds the self-advocacy that makes treatment stick.
Refer to Our Skills Group
If you're providing DBT individual therapy and want your client in a skills group, you can refer them into our standalone DBT skills class while you keep the individual work. We ask three things:
- Your client has a current individual therapist trained in DBT — you or a colleague — providing the individual-therapy portion of treatment.
- You agree the skills group is the right next step for them.
- Your client completes a brief orientation with us to confirm the setup is a fit before starting.
The division of labor is clean: you continue the individual therapy and skills coaching; we run the weekly two-hour class through all four modules (about a six-month rotation, in person or by Zoom).
How to Refer
The fastest route is our contact form — we don't staff a front desk, and we respond Monday through Thursday, usually within one business day. For anything time-sensitive about a client's safety, please use 988 or 911 rather than the form.
Common Questions
Will you send me progress updates on my client?
Can my client join just the skills group while I keep the individual work?
What do you treat, and at what ages?
Do you provide crisis or higher levels of care?
Do you take insurance?
How do I reach you?
Ready to Refer?
Send us the details and we'll take it from there — or book a quick call if you'd like to talk through fit first.