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List of Drug Rehabs and Alcohol Treatment in Kentucky

(888) 842-3167

How to find drug and alcohol treatment in Kentucky can be very difficult.  We have provided a Solutions-Based Directory for you to find rehabs that are affordable, low cost, no cost, insurance accepted, state funded as well as self pay.  You can find out the way to get off heroin, cocaine, meth, ecstasy, painkillers, pills, xanax, marijuana and alcohol.  Most treatment facilities either provide detox or work closely with a detox facility in Kentucky.  Sober living facilities can be found in Kentucky.

Outpatient, residential, extended care, men's or women's, Christian, faith based, outdoor wilderness, dual diagnosis, mental health, behavioral health, detox and long term care are available to you in Kentucky.

Kentucky is known for the widespread epidemic of meth ( ice, crystal, glass, crank, methampetamine, tweak, tweek .) Treatment and detox for meth is becoming more and more popular in recent years. If you or someone you know needs help finding rehab or detox for meth, be sure to fill out our rapid response form on any page of this site. We are dedicated to the fight against meth. Meth is a dangerous drug that brutally kills people and ruins lives.

Heroin and opiates are all-too-often treated with methadone in large populations like Louisville and Lexington. Detox and treatment for heroin ( dope, horse, smack, h ) is available to assist people with returning to a normal lifestyle without constantly relying on maintenance drugs like methadone and Suboxone. Another major area of concern for people in Kentucky are the synthetic drugs like Oxycontin ( Oxy ), Roxicet ( Roxy ), and Oxycodone. Recovery is possible and a new life can be found by simply completing the simple form below. We will help you find the proper detox for heroin and opiates.

Want to know if your insurance will be accepted at a treatment center? Whether you have Blue Cross / Blue Shield (BCBS), Aetna, United Health Care, Humana, Assurant, Unicare, Anthem, Carefirst, Cigna, Asuris Northwest Health, Celtic Insurance, Fortis, Golden Rule, Health Net, Kaiser, Shelter, Vista, Wellpoint, Accordia or even Medicaid, Tri Care, and state funded insurance – we can usually help you find what you are looking for. We work closely with thousands of facilities that accept insurance, whether it be in network or out of network. If you don’t have insurance, many facilities are now offering payment plans, financing, and some even offer scholarships. Simply fill out our rapid response form below to find the help you need now.

 


Western Kentucky Drug and Alcohol
1145 Canton Road
Cadiz
KY

Adanta Behavioral Health Services
3020 Lebanon Road
Campbellsville
KY

South Central Drug and Alcohol
216 East 1st Street
Campbellsville
KY

Kentucky River Community Care Inc
605 South KY 15
Campton
KY

Bluegrass Comprenhensive Care Center
2330 Concrete Road
Carlisle
KY

AA and Associates
422 Main Street
Carrollton
KY

North Key Community Care
1714 Highland Avenue
Carrollton
KY

Commonwealth Substance Abuse
4150 Alexandria Pike
Cold Spring
KY

Adanta Behavioral Health Services
200 East Frazier Street
Columbia
KY

Corbin Professional Associates
967 U.S. Highway 25 West
Corbin
KY

Cumberland River Comp Care Center
610 American Greeting Road
Corbin
KY

Cumberland River Comp Care Center
3110 Cumberland Falls Highway
Corbin
KY

Jackson Behavioral Hlth Professionals
1707 Falls Highway
Corbin
KY

Catholic Charities of the Diocese
3629 Church Street
Covington
KY

Commonwealth Substance Abuse
808 Scott Street
Covington
KY

North Key Community Care
513 Madison Avenue
Covington
KY

Transitions Inc
808 Scott Street
Covington
KY

Transitions Inc
1629 Madison Avenue
Covington
KY

Adams and Associates
105 East Pike Street
Cynthiana
KY

Bluegrass Regional MH/MR Board Inc
257 Parkland Heights
Cynthiana
KY

Deborah Spicer LCSW CADC
111 North Main Street
Cynthiana
KY

Bluegrass South Comprehensive Care Ctr
650 High Street
Danville
KY

Transitions Inc
925 5th Avenue
Dayton
KY

Communicare Inc
1311 North Dixie Highway
Elizabethtown
KY

Heartland Counseling Services PSC
806 North Mulberry Street
Elizabethtown
KY
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  • Fen-phen lawyer might have to repay insurer
    A disbarred Lexington attorney who represented clients in a multimillion-dollar fen-phen settlement might have to repay his former insurance company for defense costs, a ruling filed in United States District Court says.

    On March 15, a federal judge ruled that Melbourne Mills Jr. committed "material misrepresentations or omissions of fact" in his 2003 application to Continental Casualty Co., which provided a liability policy to Mills' firm and paid for his defense in a 2005 lawsuit against him by his former fen-phen clients.

    Continental has until April 16 to tell the court the amount of defense costs it is entitled to recover from the Law Offices of Melbourne Mills Jr., the ruling said. Mills' policy provided a maximum of $5 million in coverage, according to a motion filed by Continental.

    In the motion, Continental claimed Mills improperly answered two questions on an application for insurance coverage from 2003 to 2004. If the omissions had been known, they could have kept Mills' firm from receiving insurance coverage, the company said.

    Continental's application asked whether there were any claims against Mills' firm "that may reasonably be expected to be the basis of a claim against the firm," and whether any attorney at his company had been "disbarred, suspended, formally reprimanded or subject to any disciplinary inquiry, complaint or proceeding for any reason."
  • Testimony ends in Clay vote-buying trial
    FRANKFORT A year to the day after federal authorities fanned out to arrest several prominent Clay County residents on vote-fraud charges, testimony in their trial ended Friday.

    With that accomplished, prosecution and defense attorneys will present closing arguments Monday and Tuesday, and jurors will begin deliberating Tuesday, U.S. District Judge Danny C. Reeves said.

    The eight people who will learn their fate next week are former Circuit Judge R. Cletus Maricle; former school Superintendent Douglas C. Adams, who retired after he was charged; county Clerk Freddy W. Thompson; his father-in-law, Charles Wayne Jones, a former Democratic election commissioner; Magistrate Stanley Bowling; William Stivers, also a former election officer; and William Bart Morris and his wife, Debra.

    They are charged with conspiring to buy or steal votes between 2002 and 2007, the year Maricle stepped down as a full-time judge after nearly 17 years on the bench. Their alleged motive was gain for themselves and others, including jobs for themselves and contracts for Bowling's excavation company and Bart Morris' garbage-hauling business.

    Since the trial started in early February, prosecutors have presented evidence of chronic, widespread vote-buying in Clay County, sometimes involving candidates who allegedly pooled more than $100,000 to bribe voters.
  • Petrilli seeking new trial
    Attorneys for a former Fayette County school principal have asked the Kentucky Court of Appeals to grant a new civil trial on her allegations that she was forced to resign from her job.

    A Fayette Circuit Court jury rejected Peggy Petrilli's claim against the Fayette County Public Schools after a trial last July. Petrilli was the principal at Booker T. Washington Academy from 2005-2007.

    Petrilli's lawyers argue in a brief filed with the appeals court Friday that a number of judicial errors occurred in the trial, particularly in instructions given to jurors.

    Circuit Judge James Ishmael's first instruction to the jurors was to determine whether Petrilli resigned from Booker T. voluntarily. When the jury concluded the resignation was voluntary, all other issues in the case essentially became moot.

    Also, Petrilli's attorneys argued that the judge's "threshold instruction" was "given in error because it is completely different from the elements of Petrilli's claims for reverse discrimination, retaliation and whistleblower ... ."
  • Abortion a sticking point in health care deal
    A dispute over the way abortion coverage is treated under health care legislation moving through Congress remains a sticking point for House members as Democrats push for a final vote Sunday.

    With passage of health care reform on the line, President Barack Obama and congressional leaders are courting a small group of anti-abortion Democrats who supported the House bill but express concerns that the final legislative package could allow federal funds to be used to provide abortion coverage.

    The abortion question has also given rise to a public clash between the influential U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops and some Catholic organizations over how to interpret the Senate language on abortion. How anti-abortion House members end up interpreting that language has the potential to make or break historic health care reform efforts. Members of the Catholic Church are playing a major role in framing the issue, but evangelical Christians and other religious groups are also weighing in.

    Milwaukee Archbishop Jerome Listecki said the bishops' position is clear: "(The bill) does not give protections to human life that have to be present."

    But the Catholic Health Association and a group of nuns across the country say the legislation does, in fact, keep federal dollars from being used for elective abortions.
  • Senators maneuver on road plan
    FRANKFORT The state Senate is expected to take up a $4.2 billion road plan and the state's two-year budget early next week, Senate leaders said Friday.

    In a series of bizarre maneuvers on Friday, the Senate Transportation Committee and later the full Senate unanimously approved the Senate's version of the road plan.

    But minutes after approving House Bill 292 and adjourning for the day, Senate leaders huddled for several minutes and then went back into session to return House Bill 292 to the Senate Transportation Committee. That means that the Senate will be able to make further tweaks to its road plan.

    That plan includes about $207 million for construction, planning and design for road projects for Fayette County.

    Sen. Ernie Harris, R-Crestwood, chairman of the Senate Transportation Committee, said the Senate decided to keep the bill because the House had already adjourned on Friday and was no longer accepting bills from the Senate.
  • Non-profit Manchester Center to close
    There will be no Christmas dinner, no senior bingo; the pre-school will close, and summer programs are cancelled because the Manchester Center announced Friday it will close.

    The center, located at 522 Patterson Street, has served the Irishtown area of Lexington since 1940. It is the victim of the overall stagnant economy, board president David Verville said. The doors will close June 30.

    "Much like all the other non-profits in Lexington, the center has had its troubles financially, and donations have been down across the board," he said.

    The center was originally used as a library but has expanded its services to include community events such as a Halloween carnival, a Thanksgiving dinner and a spring carnival.

    It is also a source of social-service referrals for neighborhood residents, and it operates a pre-school and other programs for children and teens.
  • Tubby Smith addresses Auburn rumors
    Jordan Crawford finally mustered a smile.

    After a sour experience in the NCAA Tournament two years ago with Indiana, he's back on March's biggest stage.

    Now he wants to stay as long as possible.

    "I'm taking every second in. I'm taking it all in," Crawford said. "I want to be here as long as I can."

    Crawford, the brother of former UK star Joe Crawford, scored 17 of his 28 points in the second half and Xavier kept its run of tournament success going with a 65-54 victory over Minnesota in the first round of the West Regional on Friday in Milwaukee.
  • Ex-UofL commit quits pro team
    Former U.S. high school basketball star Jeremy Tyler quit Israeli team Maccabi Haifa and returned home Friday, cutting short a disappointing first pro season.

    The 18-year-old Tyler, who originally committed to Louisville, arrived in Israel on a wave of publicity in August after deciding to skip his senior year at San Diego High School to gain professional experience.

    However, his time in Israel was fraught with problems, and he left two months before the end of the season.

    In the 10 games Tyler played for Haifa, the 6-foot-11 power forward averaged only 2.1 points and 1.9 rebounds in 7.6 minutes. Tyler, who earned a $140,000 salary, found it hard to adapt to the pro game and couldn't find a place in Maccabi Haifa's starting lineup.

    Last month, he walked out on the team at halftime to protest not getting more minutes. For the last three games, he sat on the bench not wearing a uniform after being left off the squad.
  • Justice, Polson live up to billing
    Before their quarterfinal game Friday night in the PNC/KHSAA Boys' State Tournament, West Jessamine Coach Damon Kelly was joking around with Shelby Valley Coach Jason Booher.

    "Let's just give them what the fans want," Kelly said he told Booher. "Let's go one-on-one, nobody fouls out."

    Well, it wasn't quite like that when West Jessamine's Jarrod Polson and Shelby Valley's Elisha Justice, two of the best point guards in the state, went head-to-head in Rupp Arena.

    " The two best point guards in the state," Kelly said.

    But the two senior stars did put on a good show as Shelby Valley dominated the second half to beat the Colts 67-54.
  • Radiohead takes a shot in Florida Derby
    The scenario laid out before Radiohead in Saturday's Florida Derby is hardly one trainer Rick Dutrow would describe as ideal.

    A notorious stickler for giving his horses time between races, Dutrow hates that he has to face top company just three weeks after a big effort in his 3-year-old debut. If that weren't enough to make the Kentucky Derby-winning trainer a little edgy, Radiohead will also be making his run from outside post No. 11.

    Despite all the negatives, the overwhelming positive ultimately won out for Dutrow.

    By asking a little extra of Radiohead now, Dutrow hopes it will allow him to have a little extra in reserve when it matters most.

    "I wish I had five weeks to be able to train him properly for his next race but, you know, there's pressure to get to (the Kentucky Derby) in six weeks and going to the big race is what I love," Dutrow said. "Three weeks might cost us Saturday, but I know six weeks would be really good for the horse."