This addiction recovery program research survey form is designed for organizations that need clearer insight into what people want from recovery services. It helps capture feedback from people seeking treatment, people in recovery, family members, providers, and community stakeholders so program planning reflects a wider range of lived experience and professional perspective.
The template focuses on practical decisions that shape participation and outcomes. It asks about preferred treatment settings, realistic program length, interest in medication-assisted treatment, therapeutic approaches such as CBT, DBT, motivational interviewing, and trauma-informed care, plus interest in holistic supports like yoga, art therapy, nutrition counseling, and fitness programming.
It also helps teams understand how support systems should be structured beyond formal treatment. Questions about support group type, meeting format, and attendance frequency make it easier to evaluate whether people would benefit more from in-person, virtual, hybrid, peer-led, drop-in, or closed-group options, along with specialized communities that match their needs.
Because the form also captures location and other contextual details, responses can reveal gaps in geographic coverage, service accessibility, and aftercare planning. That makes this a strong starting point for nonprofits, clinics, counselors, researchers, and public health teams evaluating how to build or refine addiction recovery programs.