Transforming Lives Through
Measurable Healing
Measuring and Tracking Patient Outcomes
How Farley Clients Benefit from our Treatment:
Depression
(PHQ-9)
56% Reduction
At Farley Center, from March 2025 through March 2026, clients demonstrated an average 56% reduction in depression symptoms within the first four weeks of treatment among 614 individuals who completed both assessments.
Why this is important:
- Represents full “treatment response” level improvement
- Indicates meaningful symptom relief in a short period
- Demonstrates strong engagement and clinical effectiveness
Anxiety
(GAD-7)
38% Reduction
Clients also showed clinically meaningful reductions in anxiety symptoms during treatment.
Improvements on GAD-7 results indicate:
- Reduced excessive worry and tension
- Improved concentration and emotional regulation
- Decreased physical symptoms of anxiety
Results reflect moderate levels of symptom improvement, which in behavioral health research represent strong and meaningful clinical progress.
Trauma & PTSD Symptoms
(PCL-5)
46% Reduction
For clients experiencing trauma-related symptoms, measurable improvement was also observed using the PCL-5 assessment.
These reductions in PCL-5 scores indicate:
- Fewer intrusive memories or flashbacks
- Reduced hypervigilance and emotional reactivity
- Improved sleep and overall stability
These outcomes reflect clinically significant decreases in trauma symptom severity, supporting the effectiveness of Farley Center’s trauma-informed approach.
Here’s How it Works
While in our care, clients complete a confidential weekly assessment that measures variables associated with sustained and long-term sobriety. The algorithm uses these variables, demographics, factors, and risk ratios to help measure a client’s progress. We can also use the information gathered to adjust treatment plans based on a client’s unique needs.
Factors We Track and Measure
Resilience Factors:
- Commitment to Sobriety: Successful sobriety involves more than just the desire not to drink or use – it also involves hard work.
- Spirituality: Spirituality can be complex and fluid, but it plays a huge role in the recovery process.
- Optimism: Assesses individual differences in generalized optimism versus pessimism.
- Quality of Life: Sobriety impacts overall wellness in all aspects of one’s physical, mental, and social life.
Pathology Factors:
- Depression: “Am I depressed because I rely upon substances, or do I rely upon substances because I’m depressed?”
- Anxiety: Anxiety is the reaction to stressful, dangerous, or unfamiliar situations that can interfere with leading an everyday functioning life.
- Trauma & PTSD Symptoms: Hypervigilance, anxiety, irritability – these and more symptoms of trauma are tracked and monitored.
- Verbal Craving: Verbal craving is the verbal manifestation of intense feelings of wanting to drink or use.
- Visual Craving: Visual cues can have a powerful ability to stimulate intense feelings of want.
- Stress: Stress is a key risk factor in addiction initiation, relapse, and maintenance of recovery.
Tracking Progress After Treatment
We all know that sobriety isn’t a finish line but more of a journey. So why would we stop measuring the effectiveness of our program when someone completes residential treatment?
For 12 months following residential care, clients are encouraged to complete a monthly assessment. This confidential form can be filled out anywhere and takes less than five minutes to complete. The information it provides is invaluable because it helps us continue to compare our methods to patient outcomes, advance research to better understand substance use disorder, and learn how to treat it more effectively.
Frequently Asked Questions
Absolutely. All data we collect is protected health information and will be handled according to the HIPAA Privacy Rules.