PARTNER PROFILE

Lifelines Counseling Services

Lifelines Counseling Services cares for moms and babies—before birth, in the hospital, and back home—so families can heal, stay together, and thrive with wraparound support.
Family Counseling Center Mobile
FOUNDED
1958
MISSION
Build strong individuals and families for a healthier community through counseling, assistance, referrals, and education.
Our Story

Lifelines Counseling Services of Mobile has walked with Southwest Alabama since 1958, serving over 30,000 mostly low- to moderate-income families—often at low or no cost—so no one is turned away for lack of ability to pay. Seeing a gap for pregnant and postpartum mothers facing substance use, it became the lead agency for SAFE CARE Expansion in December 2023 and has already supported 16 mothers and 16 infants. Guided by CAPTA’s Plan of Safe Care, we bring hospitals, child welfare, courts, and treatment providers around one family plan—so babies are safer, moms are supported, and families can stay together. With Mobile’s opioid abatement funding, this life-saving work is expanding to reach even more families.

Lifelinesmobile

What We Do

SAFE CARE walks with pregnant and parenting mothers facing substance use—from the first prenatal touchpoint to delivery and the months at home. Lifelines coordinates early screening, hospital notifications, and a Plan of Safe Care, then links families to treatment, counseling, and practical supports so babies are safer and families can stay together.

Before Birth (Prenatal Support)

  • Meet moms where they are; begin early screening/identification with OB and pediatric partners
  • Start case management/wraparound right away and connect to SUD treatment, mental health, home-visiting, early intervention, and community supports
  • Build a shared Plan of Safe Care (POSC) so everyone is aligned before delivery

In the Hospital (Safety & Coordination)

  • Ensure consistent notification to child protective services when an infant is identified as substance-affected (per CAPTA)
  • Activate the family’s POSC, addressing the infant’s safety and the caregiver’s SUD treatment and health needs

Back Home (Stability & Follow-Through)

  • Ongoing case management/counseling for caregivers; linkages to treatment, early intervention, home-visiting, and community resources
  • Direct assistance to remove barriers: IDs/birth certificates, transportation, utilities/rent help, supervised visitation, drug screening, HIV testing/support, car seats/layettes, and other infant needs
  • Continue POSC follow-through with partners (DHR, courts, medical and community providers) so the plan works in the home environment

All of this is designed so families can heal, stay together, and thrive—with one plan and real wraparound support from pregnancy through homecoming.

Who We Serve

Lifelines Counseling Services serves families across all Mobile districts, with services available to all populations regardless of ability to pay (sliding fee scale/free services). The majority of community members served are low-to-moderate income individuals and families who are often overlooked and underserved.

Our Approach

  • Case management, wraparound services, and counseling for moms and caregivers
  • Early screening/identification with OB and pediatric partners
  • Consistent hospital notifications for substance-affected newborns
  • Plan of Safe Care (POSC) for each infant/family
  • Linkage to SUD treatment, early intervention, home visiting, and community supports
  • Direct assistance (IDs, transport, utilities/rent help, car seats/layettes, supervised visitation, drug screening, HIV tests/support)

Measuring Success

Success looks like safer babies, steadier moms, and families staying together—with a plan that everyone follows and support that actually fits their lives.
  • Participant feedback: SAFE CARE participant surveys; partner evaluations and feedback
  • Service stats: services and referrals provided; quarterly implementation and process tracking
  • Child and family outcomes (quarterly): permanency and safety; well-being; engagement in services
  • Standardized tools and cadence: NCFAS G+R (enrollment/6-mo/discharge); ACEs (adult/child); ASQ-III (infant/toddler development)
  • Compliance: DHR Individual Service Plan and court orders; SMART goals fulfilled

Our Goals

Next 6–12 Months

  • Engage pregnant/postpartum women in treatment; finalize a SAFE CARE engagement plan with hospitals, DHR, treatment, mental health, home-visiting, and early intervention; create an information-sharing system
  • Rebuild and retain intact families through collaborative partnerships and holistic supports toward a safe, sober home
  • Reduce time infants spend out of home: case plan with services and actionable steps; stabilize housing, food, and essentials
  • Strengthen collaboration capacity: quarterly community resource meetings and monthly SAFE CARE multidisciplinary staffings
  • Evaluation: select tools; collect participant and family data; track permanency, safety, well-being, family functioning, and infant social-emotional development; monitor implementation elements

Long-term

  • Ensure required notifications to CPS for infants affected by substance exposure, withdrawal, or FASD; implement a Plan of Safe Care for each infant and address the caregiver’s health and SUD needs

Community Partnerships

Lifelines Counseling Services does this together—courts, child welfare, hospitals, treatment, home-visiting, and community agencies working from the same plan.
  • 13th Judicial Circuit Court of Alabama (Judge Edmund Naman & Children’s Policy Council)
  • Strickland Youth Center
  • Mobile County DHR
  • Lifelines leadership/infant mental health team.
  • Birthing hospitals & maternal/child providers
  • Mental/behavioral health
  • Substance use treatment facilities
  • In-home visitation/parenting
  • Housing programs
  • United Way agencies
Life buoy on a pole by the water's edge, overcast sky, coastal landscape in the background.
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Mind-Body Recovery

While it may seem new, incorporating mindfulness and yoga practices into recovery has been on the rise since these ancient practices were brought to the West from India during ‘60s and ‘70s. Even the 12-step, faith-based program Alcoholics Anonymous began including spiritual reflection and contemplative practices in recovery around that time. Cut to the present day, and you’ll find a range of faith- and nondenominational-based addiction treatment and services available to individuals seeking recovery, including those that incorporate holistic care such as yoga and meditation. Additionally, there is compelling evidence to support that mind-body interventions like yoga and meditation can be powerful complements to conventional care for various substance use disorders, including opioid misuse.

According to a clinical trial published in January of this year on the National Institute of Health’s National Library of Medicine’s PubMed site, a treatment center in Bengaluru, India, found that people withdrawing from opioids recovered from acute symptoms nearly twice as fast when traditional medication was paired with structured yoga practice. Participants practicing yoga on top of standard treatment with buprenorphine (a medication used to treat opioid use disorder and pain) stabilized within five days, compared with nine days among those receiving medication alone. The yoga group also reported markedly reduced anxiety, improved sleep quality, and better autonomic regulation (a physiological marker of stress resilience).

Beyond Detox

The Journal of the American Medical Association notes that opioid use disorder is not simply a matter of physical dependence; rather, it’s a multi-system dysregulation affecting brain reward pathways, stress systems, emotional processing and behavioral habits. Standard care often combines medication-assisted treatment with counseling and support groups, an approach that has saved countless lives. But relapse rates and treatment drop-outs remain high, leaving clinicians searching for additional tools to improve long-term success. This is where yoga and meditation enter, not as alternative treatments that replace evidence-based care, but as complements to reinforce physiological balance and emotional resilience.

Yoga engages breathing, posture and awareness, elements that tap into the autonomic nervous system, which governs stress responses. The Bengaluru trial’s findings that yoga enhanced heart-rate variability (a measure of parasympathetic “rest and digest” activity) suggest that these practices may ease the intensity of withdrawal and emotional agitation. Beyond withdrawal, research suggests that yoga and similar mind-body practices can improve outcomes across substance use disorders.

A systematic review published in the Journal of the American Board of Family Medicine found that among randomized controlled trials (some involving opioid users) yoga was associated with improvements in anxiety, pain and craving when used alongside traditional therapies.

Meditation practices, whether focused attention, breath awareness or guided imagery, are increasingly studied as tools to rewire reward circuitry disrupted by addiction. These practices bolster emotional regulation and reduce stress sensitivity, which are factors that often trigger relapse long after detoxification ends. Studies show that people receiving group mindfulness sessions (including remote or virtual varieties) alongside medication treatment reported significantly lower opioid craving compared with those receiving only standard care.

Whole-Person Healing

For people emerging from the acute phase of opioid withdrawal, long-term recovery hinges not just on avoiding substances but on rebuilding life with purpose, resilience and balance. Yoga and meditation do not replace medication-assisted therapies, counseling or peer support, but evidence increasingly suggests they can enhance those pillars by addressing underlying physiological stress responses and emotional triggers. As research continues to grow, clinics, therapists and recovery communities alike are watching closely: bridging neuroscience with ancient practices may offer a new frontier in healing from one of the most challenging public health crises of our time.

Local Resources and Integrative Options

In Mobile County, Alabama, there is a broad range of treatment options, many of which are listed on the Project Persevere website’s Treatment Programs page. Below, find the list of a few that incorporate holistic practices with traditional therapies. Remember, recovery is not one-size-fits-all, and not every center explicitly lists yoga or meditation on its roster of services. Still, many coordinate with community partners or wellness professionals to help clients explore these practices as part of holistic aftercare or ongoing relapse prevention.

  • Vets Recover – Mental health therapy and support for substance abuse to veterans, first responders and their families.
  • AltaPointe Health – Outpatient substance use disorder treatment prioritizing pregnant women with intravenous substance use disorders, women with dependent children, individuals with intravenous substance use disorders, individuals who are HIV positive and all others with substance use disorders.
  • Bradford Health Services – Inpatient and outpatient recovery programs for substance use disorders, incorporating a variety of evidence-based approaches.
Explore Our Programs

Discover how Project Persevere’s initiatives are creating real impact across treatment, prevention, recovery, and community support. Explore our programs below to see how each one contributes to lasting change in the fight against opioid addiction.

Man sitting outdoors at sunset, reflecting on opioid recovery and hope.

Wellborn Strategies + CiviConnections

Team Wellborn Strategies + CiviConnections develops and executes a multi-platform communications and paid media campaign that reduces stigma, raises awareness of treatment options, and strives to prevent new cases of opioid use disorder. The program includes polling and audience research, creative production, strategic media placement across digital and traditional channels, public relations, grantee coordination, and real-time campaign optimization.

Waterfront Rescue Mission

Waterfront Rescue Mission’s Recovery Readiness, the first of three phases in its LifeBuilder Recovery Program, addresses opioid issues in Mobile through a holistic, faith-based approach. By addressing the physical, emotional, and spiritual aspects of addiction, they help individuals build a strong foundation for long-term recovery and sustainable life change.

Volunteer Opportunities

Contact : cbrown@lifelinesmobile.org
705 Oak Circle Dr E, Mobile, AL 36609