Group therapy has always been a cornerstone of substance use disorder (SUD) treatment. But anyone who’s ever run a group of 16 to 20 people knows the real challenge doesn’t end when the session does—it starts when the notes begin.
At Gibson, a Missouri-based SUD provider, high-volume group care is part of daily life. One session can mean dozens of individual notes. Multiply that across a full week in a workforce-strained environment, and documentation quickly becomes more than an inconvenience.
Instead of accepting that as “just how it is,” Gibson leaned into innovation.
In this episode of No Notes, host Denny Morrison, PhD, sits down with Janice Ruesler, PhD, LPC, Director of Educational & Special Initiatives at Gibson Center for Behavioral Change, to talk about how they’re using AI to make group therapy more manageable, more scalable, and a lot less exhausting for their clinicians.