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Thursday, Mar 28, 2024

Rehab Recovers After Tragedy

Robert Pfeifer, co-founder of addiction treatment center Sober College in Woodland Hills, dedicated his life to bettering the lives of others. Just last month, the husband and father of two suddenly passed away, but his dream lives on through the center’s unusual mission and the people who knew him. “Robert’s passion and vision was, ‘How can I help you help yourself?’” said Mindi Levins Pfeifer, Pfeifer’s widow and co-founder of Sober College. “Hundreds of people had separate relationships with Robert and ask, ‘Are you going to sell Sober College?’” The answer is a resounding no. In fact, the for-profit treatment and education facility has a growth-oriented future as it prepares to move into its new Therapeutic Learning Center in Woodland Hills, which will be dedicated to the memory of Robert Pfeifer, who died of an unexpected heart attack on July 9 at the age of 50. What sets Sober College apart from other drug rehab facilities is its dual focus on addiction treatment and schooling. To be in the program, a young adult must enroll in Sober College for at least 90 days with the average length of stay closer to nine months. During this time, the person in recovery resides at one of the company’s housing or apartment locations and works on his or her addiction through therapy, medical treatment and therapeutic activities such as surfing and rock climbing. Simultaneously, enrollees also pursue their educational goals such as earning a high school equivalency certificate or college credits. “The business model, I think, really was to help young adults and their families get sober and learn how to live without drugs and alcohol but without having to compromise everything you do as an 18-year-old,” said Pfeifer. Scott Spackey, author of the book “Project Addiction: The Complete Guide to Using, Abusing and Recovering from Drugs and Behaviors” believes therapeutic activities combined with an academic curriculum is good for an addict’s self-esteem. “Anytime someone in recovery is involved with something that’s healthy, it helps build confidence, gives them a sense of self-worth and accomplishment and chips away at that nagging feeling we aren’t good enough,” he said. Partner search The Pfeifers started Sober College in 2006 after identifying a need for specialized treatment targeting adults between the ages of 18 and 26. With both Robert and Mindi having backgrounds in social work, they wanted to look beyond addiction to the whole person and decided to incorporate education into their treatment. Starting out, Sober College’s biggest challenge was finding a school that would partner with the treatment facility for its educational component. The Pfeifers went to USC and UCLA with no luck and finally found their dream partner in Burbank-based Woodbury University. Now through the university, Sober College offers five accredited classes in such subjects as public speaking, sociology and health and wellness. In addition, if a student does well in these classes, he or she could receive automatic admission into Woodbury to finish earning a degree. Another challenge faced was the initial lack of financial support from government and insurance companies as the rehab started with a cash-pay-only model. However, more recent legislation that does not discriminate between physical and mental illnesses, including addiction, has changed that. “The Affordable Care Act and the Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act have provided substance abuse benefits to more than 30 million Americans, so it’s certainly a game changer for drug treatment overall,” wrote Bill Hazelton, chief marketing and admissions officer at Sober College, in an email to the Business Journal. “Before the mental health parity act, insurers could impose less favorable substance abuse benefits, if any at all, compared to the standard medical benefits typically offered. But now, drug treatment limitations cannot be any different than what they are for medical limitations.” The law prevents insurers and health plans from providing lower reimbursement rates for addiction compared to physical illnesses, while the ACA provides insurance to millions of previously uninsured patients. Both new laws greatly benefited the couple’s business. Nevertheless, Harry Nelson, one of Sober College’s attorneys and friend to Robert Pfeifer, said the treatment center already did the legwork before these laws went into effect and thus has a solid brand with or without insurance. “Sober College programs learned to thrive in a pre-insurance environment,” he said. “The programs had to survive before insurance was stronger, because they had to build a brand to generate referrals from around the country. Insurance made it more accessible, but I think their model was already proven successful long before ACA.” Its business model is geared toward non-California residents as about 75 percent of its clients are from out of state. Part of the reason for this is because it is often easier for people to commit to sobriety when taken out of their environment. At any given time, Sober College has about 55 to 60 clients in different stages of the program and has helped nearly 1,200 people in recovery come through the rehab center since inception. New leader Following her husband’s sudden death, it fell to Pfeifer to carry out his mission. In a state of shock, she made the decision to continue to innovate Sober College and the work it does, all in Robert’s honor. “The truth is now I can’t imagine it not becoming everything he wanted it to,” she said. “I’m going to do everything I can to honor the kids and business and to keep that crazy visionary spirit alive in everything we do.” Sober College has already expanded south into San Diego and hopes to partner with Woodbury University there to offer similar services and educational resources. Back in the Valley, the rehab center plans to incorporate a hybrid model of its program, where students will mainly participate online and check in at the Woodland Hills campus once a month. Its current learning center, located at 6233 Variel Ave., houses an art studio, music studio and performing venue as well as the rehab’s clinical staff. However, in the upcoming weeks, Sober College will be moving to a larger Therapeutic Learning Center just down the street. The new 33,000-square-foot facility will include a professional recording studio, yoga and meditation room, a library, computer lab, fitness evaluation studio as well as a music and performance hall. It will also connect to an administration building, providing the center with a more cohesive space. Aside from its main campus which holds the learning center, administrative offices as well as some student housing, Sober College has many locations throughout the greater Valley, including other housing facilities and places for therapeutic activity like hiking, snowboarding and even indoor skydiving. Furthermore, students and staff recently built the world’s largest dreamcatcher, a traditional Native American craftwork, and have been in contact with Guinness World Records Inc. to document it. They built the dreamcatcher to symbolize how addiction kills dreams and how dreamcatchers can bring them back. But with Pfeifer’s death, the dreamcatcher also represents how his dream and spirit live on through the work of Sober College. “Sober College was all his (Robert’s) idea,” said Pfeifer. “We hope we can just keep this going for him, and we have to believe he is still here.”

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