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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.

 

Liberty Ranch


Kings Mountain
(877) 368-4258   KY

The Liberty Ranch is a drug abuse and alcohol recovery home for men and women in the Grove Ridge Community off of Highway 501 in Kings Mountain, Kentucky. A Recovery home is where clients go after drug addiction and alcohol rehab. While residing in drug rehab and alcohol addiction centers, individuals learn about the disease of alcoholism and drug addiction and how their lives have been impacted as well as those around them. They also learn about the solution to their addiction lies in the application of the 12-steps. After discharging to a Recovery Home residents begin to learn how to apply those 12-step principles in their lives. Participation in 12-step meetings and sponsorship is mandatory and necessary.
Clean and Sober Detox

8946 Madison Avenue
Fair Oaks
(916) 965-DETOX (3386)   KY

At Clean & Sober Detox, located in serene Fair Oaks, we provide a safe detoxification experience. Not all individuals seeking detoxification from the disease of an addiction will require hospitalization. For the individuals who are seriously seeking recovery from an addiction we provide a safe, structured environment that has supervised care 24 hours a day.Private rooms are available and intakes are processed 24 hours a day. All clients are assured strict confidentiality.
Destination Hope

6555 NW 9th Ave.
Fort Lauderdale
(888) 684-4673   KY

Destination Hope is a freestanding substance abuse treatment center with community housing for men. The program provides day and night treatment as well as an intensive outpatient program.
Challenges

5100 Coconut Creek Parkway
Fort Lauderdale
(888) 755-3334   KY

Challenges' focused and highly specialized dedication to relapse treatment and relapse prevention, is uniquely distinguished from other types of treatment facilities. Whether it's addictions, drug abuse and chemical dependency, or dual-diagnosed disorders, Challenges is the preferred facility for the treatment of relapse. Challenges is the first facility in this country to provide intensive treatment of relapse as a specialty, and we feature the first and only treatment center which has been awarded national certification as a "Center of Excellence":in relapse treatment and prevention by the renowned and leading international expert in the treatment of relapse, Terence Gorski. (Gorski-CENAPS).
Kentucky Drug Rehab Helpline


Louisville
(888) 842-3167   KY

If you are looking for a Kentucky drug rehab or alcohol treatment center, we can help. Simply call our toll free number to find Detox or drug rehab in Kentucky. We help with all addiction treatment including cocaine, heroin, meth, alcohol, oxycontin and suboxone.
Transformations Drug & Alcohol Treatment Center

14000 South Military Trail Suite 204A
Delray Beach
(866) 211-5538   KY

Transformation- Metamorphosis A complete change, such as from a caterpillar to a butterfly Transformations Treatment Center is a leading provider of addiction treatment services designed to help individuals who struggle with chemical dependency. Transformations utilizes a three phase step down program designed to help those transform from an addiction centered lifestyle to trusting in the recovery process. The philosophy of Transformations is based on the theory that addiction or alcoholism is a three-fold disease: physical, mental, and spiritual. At Transformations we treat the individual as a whole. Transformations is located in the heart of Delray Beach, Florida which is known as the recovery capital of the nation. Delray Beach offers 100's of 12 step recovery meetings to help individuals build healthy support groups.

Adanta Behavioral Health Services
Highway 90 101 Adanta Circle
Albany
KY

WestCare Kentucky
10057 Elkhorn Creek
Ashcamp
KY

Our Lady of Bellefonte Hospital
Saint Christopher Drive
Ashland
KY

Pathways Inc
201 22nd Street
Ashland
KY

Pathways Inc
201 22nd Street
Ashland
KY

Kentucky River Community Care Inc
1060 Grand Avenue
Beattyville
KY

Riverbend Treatment Center
1220 Center Street
Beattyville
KY

River Valley Behavioral Healthcare
P.O. Box 107
Beaver Dam
KY

Four Rivers Behavioral Health
1304 Main Street
Benton
KY

The Counseling Center
806 Poplar Street
Benton
KY

Bluegrass Alcohol Counseling
204 North Broadway
Berea
KY

Alternatives in Treatment LLC
941 Lehman Avenue
Bowling Green
KY

Educational Counseling of America
920 Clay Street
Bowling Green
KY

Guesthouse Inc
2349 Russellville Road
Bowling Green
KY

Hilltop Counseling Services
1045 Elm Street
Bowling Green
KY

Park Place Recovery Center
822 Woodway Street
Bowling Green
KY

Communicare Inc
2075 ByPass Plaza
Brandenburg
KY

Comprehend Inc
134 Grandview Drive
Brooksville
KY

Adanta Behavioral Health Services
390 Keen Street
Burkesville
KY
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  • Ruling goes against fen-phen lawyer in liability policy case
    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."
  • Clay County is home to another Kentucky Wild Cat
    WILD CAT At dawn, the mouth of the Beech Creek is a deep jade green. The ground that rises up all it is the unmistakable color of wood shavings. The sky above it is cloaked in a still frozen fog. Visible in dark patches, freshly turned earth, ready for planting.

    Still, the roosters down at Larry Owens' compound are noisily gearing up for their big every-morning-doodlefest, beaten already to the punch by the gee-whiz daffodil bulbs which have forced their greens up and their yellow petals out to greet this day.

    It's March Madness in Little Wild Cat, a town of maybe 75. That might not count the whole Combs family that lives over in Big Wild Cat, says Chris Davidson, who is out in his camouflage this morning, thinking of bagging a few squirrels, and isn't up to doing a census.

    Big and Little Wild Cat are separated by Honchell Bend which catches a curve on Ky. 11 and folds down and away from the road into a veritable well of Wild Cat past. There's the behemoth sawmill and the roadside commissary that served it. There's the white boarding house where something like 50 men used to bunk when the lumber was coming in and railroad ties and mining posts had to be made on the QT.

    Zella Webb's house now sits on just barely higher land than her Grandmamma Margaret's which washed away from this site in 1947. They found the house in yonder ways, but, by then, everything was gone and, well, that's just life lived this near to a river.
  • 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.
  • New civil trial sought for former Fayette principal Petrilli
    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 ... ."
  • 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.
  • Manchester Center will close in JuneNon-profit Manchester Center to close June 30
    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.
  • Mark Story: Wake Forest agitator will test Cousins' composure
    NEW ORLEANS If this were the WWE, Chas McFarland would be the "heel;" DeMarcus Cousins the "face."

    If it were a Batman movie, the Wake Forest senior center would be the Joker to the UK big man's Caped Crusader.

    Since it is the NCAA Tournament, what McFarland represents is the ultimate composure test for Kentucky's sometimes combustible freshman center.

    When UK faces off against Wake Forest in Saturday's East Regional second round, the matchup of emotionally volatile centers could be pivotal.

    Will Rogers who famously said he never met a man he didn't like never encountered Chas (pronounced Chase) McFarland on a basketball court.
  • Mathies 'amped up' for UK game in hometown
    LOUISVILLE There will be dozens of familiar faces in the stands for A'dia Mathies.

    The Louisville native who starred for Iroquois, will be back home when Kentucky plays in the NCAA Tournament on Saturday against Liberty in Freedom Hall.

    The thought of playing in front of so many friends and family might scare some freshmen. But not Mathies, the Southeastern Conference Freshman of the Year and the No. 19 Cats' second-leading scorer.

    "It gets me more amped up," she said this week.

    Coach Matthew Mitchell believes it when he hears it.
  • Barrage of threes lift UK to easy victory
    NEW ORLEANS Kentucky mocked all the concern about being too young or too inexperienced or too something for the one-and-done pressure of the NCAA Tournament on Thursday.

    Looking every bit like the No. 1 seed in the East Region and a national championship contender, UK put a men-against-boys whipping on 16th-seed East Tennessee State 100-71.

    Kentucky (33-2) assumed a 10-point lead less than seven minutes into the game, expanded the margin to 30 late in the first half and breezed into Saturday's second-round game against Wake Forest.

    East Tennessee State (20-15) hoped to stay close and rattle Kentucky. UK wanted to crush the Bucs' spirit quickly and decisively. "We did a good job of that today," Daniel Orton said.

    As the first half ended with Kentucky ahead 54-26, television commentator Will Perdue turned to scouts from Wake Forest sitting behind him and asked, "Get anything out of that?"
  • Mark Story: Bledsoe comes out firing like Delk
    NEW ORLEANS Before his first NCAA Tournament game ever, Eric Bledsoe sought counsel from his own personal Yoda.

    Tony Delk, star of Kentucky's 1996 NCAA champions and current UK coach in training, told the freshman from Alabama that the first tourney game is the hardest one.

    "Because you don't know what might happen," Bledsoe said. "He said you're always nervous, but you've got to get it out of your system and, after that, it's easy."

    If the NCAA Tournament gets any easier for Bledsoe, well, UK will have to immediately hang his jersey in Rupp Arena's rafters.

    Here in the Big Easy, the 6-foot-1 freshman came out hotter than a Remoulade Sauce. Bledsoe drained nine of 11 shots, including 8-for-9 three pointers to score a career-high 29 points.