Rehab Centers in Butner

List of Drug Rehab Centers in Butner, NC

RJ Blackley Alcohol and Drug Abuse Treatment Ctr is a rehab center providing services in and around Granville County.

They provide a wide range of services, settings and treatment approaches such as:Prescribes Administer Buprenorphine And Or Naltrexone, Hospital Inpatient Detoxification, Contingency Management Motivational Incentive.

They offer special programs that are tailored to unique individual needs such as: Persons With Co Occurring Mental And Substance Abuse Disorders and Comprehensive Substance Abuse Assessment.

If you are interested in attending or using one of the services offered by RJ Blackley Alcohol and Drug Abuse Treatment Ctr, they accept the following payment types: Cash Or Self Payment, Medicaid, Medicare, State Financed Health Insurance Plan Other Than Medicaid, Private Health Insurance, Sliding Fee Scale, Payment Assistance

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Central Regional Hospital
300 Veazey Road, Butner, NC 27509

Central Regional Hospital is a rehab center providing services in and around Wake County.

They provide a wide range of services, settings and treatment approaches such as:Psychotropic Medication, Hospital Inpatient, Smoking Tobacco Cessation Counselling.

They offer special programs that are tailored to unique individual needs such as: Non Nicotine Smoking Tobacco Cessation Medications and Supported Employment.

If you are interested in attending or using one of the services offered by Central Regional Hospital, they accept the following payment types: Cash Or Self Payment, Medicaid, Medicare, State Financed Health Insurance Plan Other Than Medicaid, Private Health Insurance, Military Insurance, US Department Of Va Funds

Substance Abuse and Mental Health Facilities in Butner, NC

If you live in Butner and you start abusing drugs and alcohol, there is a high risk that you might develop a co-occurring mental health disorder. On the other hand, if you have an undiagnosed mental illness, there is a likelihood that you might start abusing these substances to self-medicate the symptoms of your mental illness.

Research studies show that substance abuse and mental health disorders tend to have some underlying causes in common. These might include changes in the composition of the brain, early exposure to traumatic and stressful events, and genetic vulnerabilities.

Suicidal Behavior

If you are addicted to drugs and alcohol, it is important that you watch out of the typical signs and symptoms of suicidal behavior. Everyone who develops suicidal ideation and contemplates taking their own life will be dramatically different. However, the warning signs that these people exhibit tend to be related or interlinked.

That said, you might have been displaying many of the classic warning signs of suicide for a long time without making any attempts to take your own life. Even so, it is recommended that you seek help immediately you observe these warning signs of suicidal behavior especially if you are also struggling with addiction.

Impulse Control Disorder

Research studies report that as many as 50 percent of the people who have an impulse control disorder also struggle with substance abuse and addiction. According to the NSDUH - the National Survey on Drug Use and Health - for 2017, more than 8.5 million Americans above the age of 18 years were living with both drug and alcohol addiction as well as a co-occurring mental health disorder like impulse control disorder.

Other studies show that 35 percent to 48 percent of the people who have intermittent explosive disorders also live with addiction.

It is recommended that you seek dual diagnosis treatment to manage all of the disorders that you have been struggling with simultaneously so that one does not cause the other to recur in the future.

This is especially true if you have been diagnosed with both substances abuse as well as another co-occurring mental health or medical disorders. Although these disorders tend to occur at the same time in many cases, it is possible to overcome them. To be able to do so, you will have to go through a highly integrated dual diagnosis treatment program.

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