MADO Healthcare partners with persons who live with mental illness to offer hope in recovery and wellness. The MADO Healthcare family is built on the values of compassion, integrity, service and advocacy. Care Teams embody these values, and they serve as the foundation of the evidence-based programs and services offered at the centers.
A community that supports recovery, wellness, and symptom management. Clients work to achieve goals they identify, while receiving therapeutic services to improve life skills and self-advocacy. Learn more about the Recovery & Rehabilitation Program. Support for individuals to enhance the practice of independent living skills and facilitate community integration and greater independence.
A community that supports recovery, wellness, and symptom management. Clients work to achieve goals they identify, while receiving therapeutic services to improve life skills and self-advocacy. Learn more about the Recovery & Rehabilitation Program. Support for individuals to enhance the practice of independent living skills and facilitate community integration and greater independence.
Services
MADO Healthcare is a family owned and operated, CARF International accredited company with over 50 years of experience in the delivery of physical and behavioral healthcare services. Each client is provided the support they seek to lead a healthy life. Through persistent advocacy, MADO Healthcare seeks to positively influence mental health perceptions in attitude and practice.
MADO Healthcare was established in 1961 by Mary and Dan O'Brien. They sought to serve specialized healthcare and social service needs of individuals living within metropolitan Chicago. The company's name, MADO, is an acronym for the founders' names. Today, MADO Healthcare Centers, led by Peter O'Brien, Sr., operates as a system of three Specialized Mental Health Rehabilitation Facilities and one skilled and intermediate care Nursing Home.
MADO Healthcare supports each person in their individual pursuits to achieve wellness. Healthcare professionals offer individualized recovery planning and provide evidence-based programming to adults living with psychiatric disabilities such as bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, anxiety, depression and addiction.
MADO Healthcare's Recovery & Rehabilitation Program is a community that supports an individual's recovery, wellness, and symptom management. Clients work to achieve goals they identify for themselves, while receiving therapeutic services to improve their life skills and self-advocacy. The length of stay in the Recovery & Rehabilitation Program is determined according to the specific needs of each individual.
MADO Healthcare's 120-day Rehab and Recovery Transitions supports individuals who can benefit from a setting designed to enhance the practice of independent living skills and facilitate community integration and greater independence. Clients participate in pre-employment activity and are partnered with community support organizations.
Reviews (4)
Page Telegram
Oct 18, 2020
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Excellent people and a real kind heart community of descent folks of varying capacities. Always something for me to do here. Currently I print the meal menus every day and talk with my peers. I am content here until I have finalized the moving on program which I am expecting soon. Photographed is my very first painting of the Impressionistic style, done here at MADO! I have other talents too, including computer science and engineering. I have brought to my peers computers running Debian with internet access and YouTube music is a hit among my peers-- and very therapeutic too!
ItsYourBoy Cody
Aug 19, 2020
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Kimberly
Dec 16, 2019
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The place is run down and per my dad, they don't have helpful activities. My dad's health declined here and I ended up having t transfer him to a better facility. It is scary to visit also since it is a communal visit area. You have mentally ill patients staring at you, while you are with your loved one, shaking, and walking back and forth, which was scary. They do have someone keeping an eye on everyone but there should be a private area where you can have some privacy / less traumatic for someone who has never been to a mental healthcare facility.
Martina Harvey
Dec 22, 2018
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