Menu
  • Drug Overdose Facts
  • Caffeinated alcoholic drinks are becoming more and more popular, and two leading brands together experienced a 67-fold increase in sales, from 337,500 gallons in 2002 to 22,905,000 gallons in 2008.
  • Drinking five alcoholic drinks over the course of two hours may raise the blood alcohol level to 0.10 percent, which is considered to be legally intoxicated in every state.
  • Ativan is available in both pill and liquid forms.
  • Ecstasy was first introduced in the 1980s, but by 1995 was already less than 10% pure.
  • In one animal study involving cocaine, an addicted monkey pressed a bar 12,800 times until it got a single dose of cocaine.
1-866-847-9981
Name: Type of Treatment:
Email: Drug Abused
Phone: Describe the Situation:
City:
Alternative Housing - Transitional Living

A halfway house is a transitional living facility where a person who is trying to recover from alcohol or drug addiction can find support and re-acclimate to life and society as a drug free individual. A halfway house is a place where the person can feel secure and rebuild their life while recovering from addiction while also participate in activities which will help them do just that. Halfway houses are an ideal opportunity for individuals to be in a setting where they can acquire further counseling and different types of therapy while also learning new trades or discovering stable employment so that they can support a healthy and productive, drug-free life.

Alternative Housing Transitional living category listings in Ideal, South Dakota:

  • Sands Freedom Center
    Sands Freedom Center is a Drug Abuse Treatment Facility that is located at:

    3930 South West Avenue
    Sioux Falls, SD. 57109
    605-988-9133

    Treatment Services: Substance Abuse Programs, Alternative Housing - Transitional living, Outpatient Treatment, Residential Long-Term Treatment that is 30 days or longer, Co-Occurring Mental with Substance Abuse Issues, Women Only, Men Only, Criminal Justice Client Programs, Specialized in Hearing Impaired Clients
    Payment Options: Self Pay (Out of Pocket), Medicaid Coverage, Private or Personal Health Insurance