ross_julia.jpgReferral Directory

Julia Ross, MA, MFT
Recovery Systems
147 Lomita Dr., Suite D
Mill Valley, CA 94941
(415) 383-3611
home: (415) 924-6519
This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it
www.moodcure.com
www.recoverysystemsclinic.com

A pioneer in the field of addiction recovery, Julia Ross has founded and directed eight treatment programs in the San Francisco Bay Area since 1980. As director of outpatient programs at the Henry Ohloff House, Ross instituted seven programs in three counties, including the area's first treatment programs for the addicted family system, for addicted adolescents, and for marijuana and food-addicted individuals. Ross is currently the Executive Director of the Recovery Systems Outpatient Clinic in Marin County (1988 to present). There, she and her staff psychologists, nutritionists and physicians have developed an innovative treatment model combining nutrient therapy and biochemical rebalancing with counseling and 12-step programs. In 1994 Ross began teaching in the addiction counselor certification programs at both U.C. Berkeley and JFK University. She is the author of The Mood Cure (Penguin2004), a nutritional brain-repair manual for mood and addiction problems, and the best-selling The Diet Cure (Penguin 2000) on recovery from carbohydrate addiction. Ross has addressed hundreds of conferences and workshops, and has appeared as an expert on dozens of radio and television programs, including an NBC11-TV news special aired throughout the country in 2006. She presents training seminars for professionals on Amino Acid Therapy for the treatment of chemical dependency, carbohydrate addiction, depression, anxiety, and other neurotransmitter deficiency problems. She also provides private consultation to individual practitioners and to treatment programs and clinics. For further information on Ms. Ross's work, go to www.moodcure.com.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


Join Now

INSPIRATION:
Our passion and
enthusiasm comes from
knowing that addiction is
a curable disorder.