Harmony Therapy & Treatment Center Reimagines Youth Treatment with Better Case Management from NewOrg
Harmony Therapy & Treatment Center is a newly constructed General Residential Operation and Residential Treatment Center located in Spring, Texas, serving boys between the ages of 7 and 17. With a capacity of 16 residents, Harmony provides round-the-clock care in a warm, home-like environment built around consistency, trust, and compassion. The center specializes in helping children work through emotional and behavioral struggles using a trauma-informed approach that prioritizes individualized care and therapeutic support. Each resident is encouraged to play an active role in their treatment, helping to build confidence, restore a sense of safety, and support long-term personal development.
To support its mission and ensure consistency in care, Harmony partnered with NewOrg to modernize its clinical and operational infrastructure. NewOrg delivered a centralized, HIPAA-compliant platform tailored to the center's residential model, enabling staff to document, monitor, and manage each resident's treatment journey with greater efficiency. With customizable tools that streamline workflows, strengthen compliance, and improve real-time visibility into outcomes, NewOrg equips Harmony with the structure and flexibility needed to deliver high-quality, coordinated care.
To meet Harmony's clinical and operational needs, NewOrg implemented a customized set of features, including:
Admission and Discharge Documentation: Structured workflows guide staff through referral tracking, intake screenings, and discharge summaries that reflect resident progress and outcomes.
Clinical and Service Documentation: Staff can securely document progress notes, treatment plans, therapy sessions, and outcomes tied to service goals. The system also supports AWOL and incident reporting, with all entries time-stamped and linked to resident records.
Incident Management and Reporting: Standardized templates allow staff to log incidents and behavioral events, route them for multi-level review, and complete follow-up documentation to support accountability and compliance.
Ongoing Program Monitoring: Real-time dashboards provide visibility into current census, treatment phases, and daily participation, helping staff track attendance and clinical milestones.
Resident Progress Tracking: Clinicians can monitor individual progress over time, identify trends, and adjust care plans to support data-informed decisions.
File and Documentation Management: Consent forms, scanned notes, and service-related files are stored securely within each resident's profile with role-based access permissions.
About Harmony Therapy & Treatment Center
Chelssea McAllisterProgram Director 26619 Oak Ridge Dr Spring, TX 77380 United States https://www.harmonytherapycenter.com/ (832) 577-9320 harmonyfacilities22@outlook.com
About NewOrg Management System, Inc.
NewOrg Management System, Inc. - www.neworg.com 4000 Albemarle St NW (Ste 200)Washington, DC 20016
NewOrg is a leading software developer providing a cloud-based data management platform for nonprofits and local government/social agencies, with more than 50,000 users in the US & Canada since 2006. Celebrating 18 years providing complete, 100% customized data management for nonprofit organizations and affiliates, NewOrg's integrated software and service approach ensures that our partners improve efficiency, transparency, and sustainability.
Media Contact:
Sotiris KoutsoyannisMarketing/Communication SpecialistNewOrg Management System, Inc.866-843-2835 x3newsroom@neworg.com
To view the source version of this press release, please visit https://www.newsfilecorp.com/release/258056

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
a day ago
- Yahoo
What goods may (and may not) be affected by Trump's 35% tariff on Canada
President Trump surprised markets late Thursday with a letter announcing a 35% tariff on Canadian goods, but some notable industries such as energy could get some relief from the new threat. Guidance offered Friday morning by the White House is that this 35% rate — if Trump follows through — will increase the rate on goods currently facing a 25% duty but that key carveouts are likely to be maintained. A White House official told Yahoo Finance that the expectation is that the situation will not change for United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement-compliant goods (which are often exempt from tariffs entirely) as well as for energy products like oil and a fertilizer known as potash (these are key flashpoints that currently see 10% duties). Yet the official stressed that no final deal has been drafted and Trump hasn't made a final decision. Read more: The latest news and updates on Trump's tariffs Trump's letter also made clear that sector-specific tariffs on steel, aluminum, autos, and soon-to-be-implemented copper duties will be excluded from the 35% rate, as those goods already face duties from 25%-50%. It was a capper on a week filled with promises of major new tariffs coming Aug. 1 on countries around the world from Brazil to South Korea as well as the unveiling of those 50% duties on copper. Yet the expected continuation of some carveouts for Canada — as well as an Aug. 1 start date for all these new duties — may provide a measure of relief for markets that retreated Friday morning on the tariff threats as it began to digest Trump's latest surprise. The potential carveout for USMCA-compliant goods is significant, as experts often estimate that those excluded goods under the 2020 agreement make up around 40% of imports from Canada. Oil and the fertilizer potash have also long been keen areas of interest. Americans not only consume Canadian oil, but American refiners often mix crude oil from Canada with American crude oil, leading to fears that a cutoff would create a ripple effect on US production. Likewise, with fertilizer, many agricultural states are highly dependent on the potassium-based potash that comes in from Canada in order to grow their crops. As Iowa Sen. Chuck Grassley put it this spring in a social media post: "I plead w President Trump to exempt potash from the tariff because family farmers get most of our potash from Canada." Any relief may be tempered by the sense that these carveouts are likely to continue but remain on the table in Trump's often renegotiated deals. Indeed, Thursday's letter to Canada from the president ended with a line that has ended all letters this week: "These Tariffs may be modified, upward or downward, depending on our relationship with your Country." Ben Werschkul is a Washington correspondent for Yahoo Finance. Click here for political news related to business and money policies that will shape tomorrow's stock prices
Yahoo
a day ago
- Yahoo
What goods may (and may not) be affected by Trump's 35% tariff on Canada
President Trump surprised markets late Thursday with a letter announcing a 35% tariff on Canadian goods, but some notable industries such as energy could get some relief from the new threat. Guidance offered Friday morning by the White House is that this 35% rate — if Trump follows through — will increase the rate on goods currently facing a 25% duty but that key carveouts are likely to be maintained. A White House official told Yahoo Finance that the expectation is that the situation will not change for United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement-compliant goods (which are often exempt from tariffs entirely) as well as for energy products like oil and a fertilizer known as potash (these are key flashpoints that currently see 10% duties). Yet the official stressed that no final deal has been drafted and Trump hasn't made a final decision. Trump's letter also made clear that sector-specific tariffs on steel, aluminum, and autos and soon to be implemented copper duties will be excluded from the 35% rate as those goods already face duties from 25-50%. It was a capper on a week filled with promises of major new tariffs coming Aug. 1 on countries around the world from Brazil to South Korea as well as the unveiling of those 50% duties on copper. Yet the expected continuation of some carveouts for Canada — as well as an Aug. 1 start date for all these new duties — may provide a measure of relief for markets that retreated Friday morning on the tariff threats as it began to digest Trump's latest surprise. The potential carveout for USMCA-compliant goods is significant as experts often estimate that those excluded goods under the 2020 agreement make up around around 40% of imports from Canada. Oil and the fertilizer potash have also long been keen areas of interest. Americans not only consume Canadian oil but American refiners often mix crude oil from Canada with American crude oil — leading to fears that a cutoff would create a ripple effect on US production. Likewise with fertilizer as many agricultural states are highly depending on the potassium-based potash that comes in from Canada in order to grow their crops. As Iowa Sen. Chuck Grassley put it this spring in a social media post: "I plead w President Trump to exempt potash from the tariff because family farmers get most of our potash from Canada." Any relief may be tempered by the sense that these carveouts are likely to continue but remain on the table in Trump's often re-negotiated deals. Indeed, Thursday's letter to Canada from the president ended with a line that has ended all letters this week: "these Tariffs may be modified, upward or downward, depending on our relationship with your Country." Ben Werschkul is a Washington correspondent for Yahoo Finance. Click here for political news related to business and money policies that will shape tomorrow's stock prices Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

Hypebeast
2 days ago
- Hypebeast
BMW Unveils Japan-Only "M2 Racing" Track Car for Customer Motorsport
Summary BMWhas announced the launch of theM2Racing, a track-only customer racing model now available for order in Japan through selectBMW MMotorsport dealers in Tokyo and Osaka. Priced at ¥21,000,000 JPY ($142,809 USD), the M2 Racing is designed for aspiring racers looking for an accessible, high-performance entry into circuit competition. Based on the second-generation BMW M2, the M2 Racing ditches street legality for pure motorsport focus, featuring a 2L turbocharged inline-four engine delivering 308 hp and 309 lb-ft of torque, mated to a motorsport-tuned 8-speed automatic transmission. BMW equips the car with a mechanical limited-slip differential and custom driveshaft, ensuring sharp, balanced handling on the track. The car includes a FIA-compliant roll cage, Sabelt racing seat, fire suppression system and a lightweight CFRP roof. Other racing upgrades include KW motorsport suspension, Goodyear slicks, quick-release body panels, air jacks and data logger compatibility. Despite its aggressive focus, the M2 Racing retains features like air conditioning and a motorsport-adapted instrument panel for driver comfort. With just the right mix of performance and control, this limited-production machine is BMW's answer to the needs of Japan's privateer racing scene.