Mansfield UMADAOP
Mansfield, OH 44903· Richland County
Exact address withheld for resident privacy. Contact the residence for details.
Who this home particularly supports
DUAL Diagnosis (MH & SUD), MAT supportedThe state registry notes this home has a particular focus on serving people in this group. Other residents may also be welcome. Ask the residence directly.
Mansfield UMADAOP is a peer-run recovery home for men with a particular focus on dual diagnosis (mental health and substance use) and medication-assisted treatment support. This Level I residence operates as a democratic household where residents govern themselves with no paid staff, similar to an Oxford House model. It has up to 5 beds available. The residence is not ADA accessible. For details about openings, intake process, and house rules, contact the residence directly; the street address is withheld to protect resident privacy.
AI-generated from the state registry. Are you the operator? Claim this listing to write your own.
What this home supports
From the state registry and, where applicable, the operator’s own declarations.
MAT-friendly
Supports medication-assisted treatment (Suboxone, methadone, naltrexone) for opioid or alcohol use disorder.
Mental health + addiction (dual diagnosis)
Supports people in recovery from substance use who also have mental-health conditions.
What Level I · Peer-run means
Democratically run by residents. No paid staff. Lowest cost, highest autonomy.
Learn about all levels →Paying for it
Pricing and payment details aren’t listed in the state registry. Ask the residence directly when you call. Most homes accept some mix of self-pay, Medicaid, sliding-scale fees, or scholarships.
Are you the operator? Claim this listing to add rates and accepted payment options.
Questions to ask when you call
- • Are openings available right now?
- • What’s the intake process and timeline?
- • What recovery program (AA, NA, SMART, MAT) do residents follow?
- • What are the house rules and curfews?
- • What does a typical day look like?
- • How do you handle relapse?