2025 Outcomes Report Shows Women’s Integrated Recovery Model Driving Gains Across Clinical and Wellness Indicators
The Pearl Wellness for Women reports improvements in global recovery scores, resilience, and quality of life, signaling a shift in women’s treatment success
AUSTIN , TX, UNITED STATES, April 2, 2026 /EINPresswire.com/ -- A newly released 2025 outcomes report from The Pearl Wellness for Women, part of the Foundation Stone Family of Programs, reveals measurable improvements across multiple clinical and quality-of-life indicators, reinforcing what many leaders in behavioral health are beginning to acknowledge: sustainable recovery for women requires more than symptom stabilization alone.Using nationally benchmarked residential treatment data, The Pearl’s integrated model demonstrated significant gains in overall recovery metrics by Week 4 of treatment, alongside marked improvements in resilience, optimism, and quality of life.
The findings reflect a broader industry shift away from measuring success solely by abstinence or length of stay and toward evaluating whole-person outcomes that support long-term stability. Among the report’s key findings:
A 43% increase in Global Recovery Scores by Week 4 of treatment.
Nearly 100% improvement in Quality of Life in Recovery scores during treatment.
Significant reductions in depression, anxiety, and craving responses — key predictors of long-term recovery stability.
A more than 400% increase in spirituality scores, reflecting enhanced connection to purpose and meaning.
Strong therapeutic alliance indicators, with rising therapist satisfaction scores throughout care.
“Women’s healing requires more than a protocol,” said Marsha Stone, Founder and CEO of Foundation Stone Family of Programs. “It requires safety, community, and a space where someone can rediscover who they are beneath the pain. When those elements are present, outcomes become more than statistics; they become stories of transformation.”
Historically, many treatment programs have focused primarily on stabilizing acute symptoms of substance use, anxiety, or depression. While those interventions remain critical, leaders across the behavioral health landscape are increasingly recognizing that women’s recovery journeys often include relational trauma, caregiving pressures, identity disruption, and complex co-occurring mental health histories.
The Pearl’s programming integrates trauma-informed clinical care with spiritual connection, community-building, and personalized wellness planning, an approach designed to address these intersecting layers simultaneously.
According to Haley Sola, VP of Strategy for Foundation Stone, environment and engagement are directly correlated with measurable outcomes.
“What we’re seeing is that outcomes improve when women feel genuinely safe, not just clinically supported,” Sola said. “The Pearl was intentionally designed as a boutique recovery environment where women can slow down, reconnect, and do deeper work. When programming prioritizes identity and connection alongside therapy, engagement shifts dramatically.”
As behavioral healthcare moves toward more personalized treatment pathways, Foundation Stone leadership emphasizes the importance of matching clients with environments that reflect their clinical and emotional needs.
“Our goal is never just to fill beds,” said Caitlin Ramsey, VP of Development at Foundation Stone. “We guide women toward an environment where they can truly heal. We are a niche, relationship-driven model, and that means being intentional about who we serve and how we serve them. The women who come to The Pearl are often seeking depth, privacy, and a highly personalized experience — and our outcomes reflect that alignment.”
The publication of The Pearl’s 2025 outcomes report comes amid growing national conversations around accountability and transparency in behavioral healthcare. As payors, families, and referral partners increasingly seek measurable data, industry leaders believe outcomes reporting will define the next generation of treatment organizations.
Foundation Stone leadership maintains that the future of behavioral health will require integrating measurable clinical progress with relational, trauma-informed care.
“The future of this field isn’t about choosing between science and soul,” Stone added. “It’s about integrating both — and being willing to show the results.”
The full 2025 outcomes report for The Pearl Wellness for Women is available upon request. Contact Haley Sola at hsola@fsprograms.com
Reagan Lamp
Zilker Media
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