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  • Drug Overdose Facts
  • Anabolic steroids act in a part of the brain called the limbic system, which influences mood and is also involved in learning and memory.
  • Dependence and addiction to Ecstasy is quite common, despite the popular belief that Ecstasy is not addictive.
  • Individuals with HIV who also drink alcohol are more likely to suffer from pneumonia and to have chronic conditions such as emphysema.
  • As the morphine withdrawal progresses users may experience elevated blood pressure, chills with goose bumps alternating with hot flashes, kicking movements of the legs and excessive sweating, severe pains in the bones and muscles and muscle spasms.
  • In 2005, among individuals discharged from long term residential drug rehab, women were more likely than men to complete drug rehab or be transferred for further treatment to another drug rehab.
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Alternative Housing - Transitional Living

A halfway house is a transitional living facility where an individual who is recovering from drug or alcohol addiction can stabilize and re-acclimate to life and society as a drug free individual. A halfway house is a place where someone can feel secure and repair their life while maintaining sobriety while also participate in clean and sober, productive activities. Halfway houses are an ideal opportunity for recovering addicts to be in an atmosphere where they can receive additional counseling and different types of therapy while also learning new trades or finding stable employment so that they can support a healthy and productive, drug-free life.

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

  • Sisseton Wahpeton Sioux Tribe
    Sisseton Wahpeton Sioux Tribe is a Drug Rehabilitation Facility that is located at:

    388 Dakota Avenue
    Sisseton, SD. 57262
    605-698-3917 x106

    Treatment Services: Substance Abuse Programs, Alternative Housing - Transitional living, Outpatient Treatment, Residential Short-Term Treatment that is 30 days or less
    Payment Options: Self Pay (Out of Pocket), State Financed Insurance besides Medicaid, Private or Personal Health Insurance