About MHS Family Recovery Center FRC
MHS Family Recovery Center is a women's drug and alcohol rehab in Oceanside, California offering residential detox, short term and long term residential care, and continuing care for women navigating substance use and co-occurring mental health concerns.
Operated by Mental Health Systems, the program is uniquely designed to support mothers in recovery, with on site accommodations for clients' children.
FRC takes a trauma informed, evidence based approach that addresses addiction alongside mental health, family and life stability needs.
Women Centered Addiction Programs
Treatment often begins with a comprehensive substance use and mental health assessment, followed by residential detoxification for alcohol, benzodiazepines, cocaine, methamphetamines, or opioids.
From there, women transition into short term or long term residential treatment, with structured discharge planning and aftercare to support sustained recovery.
Clients can expect individual, group, family, and couples counseling rooted in approaches like CBT, motivational interviewing, the matrix model, relapse prevention and trauma related therapy.
Wraparound support includes case management, peer mentoring and housing assistance, vocational support and integrated primary care, acupuncture and domestic violence services.
Quick Facts
- Location: 1100 Sportfisher Drive in Oceanside, California near the San Luis Rey River
- Levels of care: Residential detox, short term and long term residential treatment and continuing care
- Who they treat: Women, including pregnant and postpartum mothers, young adults, seniors and LGBTQ clients, veterans and justice involved individuals
- Approach: Trauma informed, evidence based care addressing co-occurring mental health, pain and trauma histories
- Payment options: Most major insurance, Medicaid, Medicare and self pay, government funding and sliding fee scale
- Family features: Residential beds and child care for clients' children
- Extras: Acupuncture and integrated primary care, peer support and naloxone education





