Brain Health & Neuro-Regeneration Intensive Outpatient Program (IOP)

A VBOHC | Oak Mountain Outdoor Healthcare Program

Program Overview

Green + Blue Space Therapeutics™

  • Neuromuscular and cognitive restoration protocols

  • Epigenetic and autonomic regulation approaches

  • Behavioral health integration and functional skills retraining

  • Outcome dashboards aligned to CMMI value-based care metrics

  • Biomarker-informed precision support (HRV, inflammation, gait, cognition)

The program is appropriate for individuals with neurological and neuroimmune conditions who benefit from structured, non-pharmacologic, whole-system neurorecovery.

VBOHC Outcomes Framework includes:

  • Cognitive function improvement (MoCA/NIH Toolbox)

  • Mobility and balance gains

  • Pain and migraine frequency reduction

  • Autonomic regulation (HRV)

  • Reduced ED utilization & specialty care over 12 months

  • Quality-of-life improvement (Neuro-QOL)

CMS Application-Ready Pillars:

  1. Population-specific risk stratification

  2. Multi-disciplinary, team-based interventions

  3. Environment-first therapeutic exposures

  4. Standardized outcome measurement

  5. Cost-of-care reduction through non-pharmacologic recovery pathways

PROGRAM-SPECIFIC HOMEPAGE SECTIONS

Below are ready-to-drop website blocks for each neurological condition.

Migraine & Chronic Headache Syndromes

OMOHC’s migraine and chronic headache track offers a non-pharmacologic, environment-anchored approach that stabilizes the autonomic system and reduces inflammatory triggers. Outdoor movement, sensory regulation, and guided breathing in natural environments modulate pain pathways while reducing frequency and intensity of migraine cycles.

Focus Outcomes:

  • Reduced headache days per month

  • Lower medication dependence

  • Improved sleep & autonomic flexibility (HRV)

  • Stress-related trigger reduction

Key Interventions:
Nature-based sensory down-regulation, anti-inflammatory lifestyle modules, vestibular retraining, light/sound sensitivity support, biofeedback.

Multiple Sclerosis (MS)

This MS-specific track blends low-impact outdoor mobility, fatigue-management, anti-inflammatory protocols, and resilience training to support neuroplasticity and improve functional stability.

Focus Outcomes:

  • Improved gait, balance, and endurance

  • Reduced flare severity and frequency

  • Cognitive clarity and fatigue management

  • Mental health stabilization

Key Interventions:
Forest-based endurance pacing, temperature-safe outdoor sessions, anti-inflammatory nutrition, MS-specific strength training, cognitive rehabilitation.

Parkinson’s Disease

Designed to slow motor decline and enhance neuroplasticity, this track integrates rhythmic walking, outdoor amplitude-based movement, sensory cues, vocal activation, and autonomic regulation.

Focus Outcomes:

  • Gait stability

  • Reduced tremor severity

  • Improved motor amplitude and coordination

  • Mood and cognitive improvements

Key Interventions:
Nature-based gait training, LSVT-style amplitude work, balance trails, voice activation outdoors, neuro-regenerative breathing practices.

Alzheimer’s Disease & Early Dementias

For individuals in early-stage cognitive decline, structured outdoor routines provide predictable sensory input, stress reduction, and cognitive stimulation shown to support brain health and delay progression.

Focus Outcomes:

  • Stabilized cognitive decline trajectory

  • Enhanced daily function

  • Reduced caregiver burden

  • Increased mood, social engagement, and sleep quality

Key Interventions:
Guided nature walks, memory-activation stations, multisensory cognitive exercises, caregiver integration, biophilic therapeutic routines.

Post-Stroke Syndromes

This track offers an environment-based neurorehabilitation complement to physical and speech therapy, enhancing motor relearning, sensory integration, balance, and emotional regulation.

Focus Outcomes:

  • Improved functional mobility

  • Upper extremity strength and fine motor gains

  • Spatial awareness and gait retraining

  • Reduced post-stroke anxiety and depression

Key Interventions:
Outdoor task-oriented movement, bilateral coordination, visual-spatial retraining, speech-cognition circuits, breath and nervous system regulation.

Neuropathy (including diabetic neuropathy)

Outdoor terrain variability paired with sensory retraining produces meaningful improvement in neuropathy symptoms while addressing metabolic contributors.

Focus Outcomes:

  • Increased sensation, proprioception, and balance

  • Reduced neuropathic pain

  • Improved glucose regulation and metabolic markers

  • Reduced fall risk

Key Interventions:
Sensory walking paths, foot mobilization circuits, anti-inflammatory and metabolic education, balance and gait training, heat/cold sensory modulation.

Integrative Behavioral Health (IBH) for Neurological Conditions

Because neurological disorders and mental health are deeply intertwined, every track includes integrated behavioral health focused on:

  • Anxiety + autonomic dysregulation

  • Cognitive burden and overwhelm

  • Sleep disruption

  • Identity, grief, and adjustment after diagnosis

IBH Components:
Somatic therapy, environmental regulation, cognitive reframing, behavioral activation, nature-based emotional processing modules.

12-WEEK IOP CURRICULUM (DAILY SCHEDULE)

Format: 3–4 days per week • 3-hour sessions • CMS-compliant interdisciplinary model
Each week blends nature-based therapeutic exposure, neuromuscular retraining, behavioral health, and epigenetic lifestyle modules.

WEEKLY THEMES

  1. Autonomic Reset & Sensory Regulation

  2. Neuroplasticity Foundations

  3. Movement Retraining & Gait Stabilization

  4. Cognitive Strength & Executive Function

  5. Inflammation + Metabolic Drivers of Neurological Disease

  6. Pain Pathways & Neuro-recovery

  7. Balance, Coordination & Spatial Awareness

  8. Environmental Rhythm & Stress Recovery

  9. Behavioral Activation & Habit Architecture

  10. Community, Purpose & Support Systems

  11. Lifestyle Medicine Integration

  12. Long-Term Stabilization & Self-Management Plan

DAILY SESSION STRUCTURE (Used Across All 12 Weeks)

1. Outdoor Regulation Warm-Up (20 min)

Breath pacing, HRV priming, light mobility, grounding practices.

2. Condition-Specific Neurorecovery Circuit (45 min)

Examples:

  • Migraine → sensory down-regulation + gentle vestibular mobility

  • MS → endurance pacing + neuro-stability work

  • Parkinson’s → amplitude-based rhythmic movement

  • Dementia → sensory/cognitive circuits

  • Neuropathy → sensory walking + proprioception

  • Stroke → bilateral coordination + task-based movement

3. Integrative Behavioral Health Session (40 min)

Somatic therapy, nervous-system mapping, cognitive reframing, trauma-informed processing, identity shifts after diagnosis.

4. Neuroeducation Mini-Module (20 min)

Topics rotate weekly: inflammation, sleep, metabolism, neuroplasticity, pacing, stress circuitry, nutrition.

5. Outdoor Skill Practice / Functional Integration (30 min)

Applying skills to real environments: trail navigation, terrain variation, mindfulness in motion, visual-spatial tasks.

6. Cool-Down + Biometrics Tracking (15 min)

HRV, pain scores, gait metrics, cognitive quick-checks, subjective well-being.

Clinical Model: How It Works

1. Environment-First Regulation (VBOHC Core)

Patients engage in structured outdoor sessions that lower sympathetic overactivation, improve HRV, and stabilize blood pressure.

2. Behavioral Health Integration

  • Anxiety reduction protocols

  • Somatic regulation

  • Cognitive + experiential approaches

  • Trauma-informed care

3. Medical Oversight & Monitoring

  • Blood pressure tracking

  • Lipid panels

  • Glucose and A1c monitoring

  • Weight and metabolic markers

4. Cardiometabolic Lifestyle Support

  • Nutrition

  • Sleep interventions

  • Movement in green/blue spaces

5. Data-Driven Outcomes (CMS Quality Aligned)

Every patient receives a personalized dashboard with validated metrics mapped to CMS value-based care incentives.

12-Week Curriculum (Example Weekly Rhythm)

Daily Structure (IOP Schedule)

  • Morning Regulation: guided outdoor nervous-system practices

  • Group Behavioral Health: anxiety, stress, and mind-body integration

  • Cardiometabolic Education: BP, cholesterol, glucose, inflammation

  • Movement Therapy: walking, hiking, mobility work

  • Biometric Tracking: HRV, BP logs, sleep patterns

  • Nature-Based Recovery Session

Weekly Themes

  1. Understanding the Stress–Heart Connection

  2. Stabilizing Blood Pressure Through Regulation

  3. Metabolic Health + Anxiety Pathways

  4. Inflammation, Sleep, and Recovery Cycles

  5. Nutrition for Cardiometabolic Balance

  6. Trauma-Informed Heart Health

  7. Building Safe Internal + External Environments

  8. Outdoor Movement for Cardiovascular Function

  9. Cognitive + Somatic Behavioral Health Skills

  10. Strengthening Autonomic Flexibility

  11. Reducing Environmental Load + Triggers

  12. Transition Planning + Long-Term Maintenance

Program Outcomes

Patients typically see improvements in:

  • Reduced anxiety and panic symptoms

  • Lower systolic and diastolic blood pressure

  • Improved cholesterol and triglyceride levels

  • Weight reduction + improved glucose control

  • Better sleep and heart-rate variability

  • Increased energy, confidence, and resilience

  • Reduced reliance on emergency or urgent care

Value-Based Care Alignment

This IOP is structured for:

  • 1115 demonstration alignment

  • CMMI model-test readiness

  • Risk-stratified care pathways

  • Cardiovascular + behavioral health quality measures

  • Total cost of care reduction

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