Menu
  • Drug Overdose Facts
  • Individuals addicted to opiates may experience a degeneration in nerve cells which results in an increased need for and tolerance to the opiates they are abusing.
  • During 2010, the average age at first time non-medical use of the prescription opioid OxyContin was 22.8 years old among individuals aged 12 to 49.
  • Heroin was a factor in 213,118 emergency room visits in 2009.
  • During the 1980s it was thought that GHB could possibly enhance the bodys production of growth hormone, and as a result it flew off the shelves as a diet supplement during this time.
  • Among first time drug users in the United States in 2009, most (2.4 million people aged 12 years or older) had used marijuana as their first drug.
1-866-847-9981
Name: Type of Treatment:
Email: Drug Abused
Phone: Describe the Situation:
City:
Residential Short-Term Treatment that is 30 days or less

Residential short-term treatment for substance abuse is a variety ofrehabilitation program where the individual will stay at the facility on an inpatient basis, and which normally requires a stay of 30 days or less. While attending residential short-term treatment the person undergoes an intensive but brief course of treatment that typically includes a supervised detox, counseling, and other forms of therapy which are aimed at helping the person to recover and be able to function without drugs in everyday life once treatment is complete. Residential short-term treatment is not always effective for all cases of addiction, and most will need an aftercare program or additional treatment in a more long-term residential setting.

Residential Short Term Treatment that is 30 days or less category listings in Reydon, Oklahoma:

  • Cushing Valley Hope
    Cushing Valley Hope is a Drug and Alcohol Treatment Facility that is located at:

    100 South Jones Avenue
    Cushing, OK. 74023
    918-225-1736

    Treatment Services: Substance Abuse Programs, Detoxification, Residential Short-Term Treatment that is 30 days or less
    Payment Options: Self Pay (Out of Pocket), Private or Personal Health Insurance