Sunday, January 29, 2012

Salvation Army ARC



Providing excellent residential treatment free of charge, for adults in Pennsylvania who are willing to accept Jesus Christ as their Lord and Savior

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Read more: Pennsylvania Drug & Alcohol Rehabs (Low Cost) 


Salvation Army ARC Pennsylvania
ARC - Pittsburgh
44 South 9th Street
Pittsburgh, PA  15203-1196
(412)481-7900

ARC - Erie
1209 Sassafras Street
Erie, PA  16501 
(814)456-4237

ARC - Altoona
200 7th Avenue
Altoona, PA  16602
(814)946-3645

ARC - Harrisburg
3650 Vartan Way
Harrisburg, PA  17110
(717)541-0203

ARC - Scranton
610 South Washington Avenue
Scranton, PA  18505
(570)346-0007

ARC - Wilkes-Barre
163 Hazle Street
Wilkes-Barre, PA  18702
(570)822-4248

ARC - Philadelphia
4555 Pechin Street
Philadelphia, PA  19128
(215)483-3340


Read more: Salvation Army ARC Pennsylvania 

Mercy Philadelphia Hospital



Residential hospital based detox and rehab for adult men and women. Sliding scale payments, Medicaid and insurance.
  • Certified
  • Free/Affordable
  • Dual Diagnosis
  • Insurance
  • Medicaid
  • Detox
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Read more: Pennsylvania Drug & Alcohol Rehabs (Low Cost) 

Saturday, January 28, 2012

St Joseph's Hospital Free to those in need. Certified Free/Affordable Detox Insurance Medicaid More… Read more: Pennsylvania Drug & Alcohol Rehabs (Low Cost)



North Philadelphia hospital based detoxification. Free to those in need.
  • Certified
  • Free/Affordable
  • Detox
  • Insurance
  • Medicaid
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Pennsylvania Drug & Alcohol Rehabs (Low Cost) 

Teen Challenge of Philadelphia



Only $750 for 12 months of residential drug treatment. Christian recovery, strict rules of conduct, seperate programs for men and women. A part of Teen Challenge International.
  • Christian
  • Free/Affordable
  • Three Months+


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Pennsylvania Drug & Alcohol Rehabs (Low Cost) 

How to Get Past Marijuana Detox


People who claim that marijuana is not addictive have obviously never spent a sleepless night of headaches and nausea lusting for just that little something to take the edge off.


Marijuana withdrawal is tough, and the detox pains are very real and strong enough to keep a lot of people using more than they want for longer than they want to.
Because marijuana detox doesn’t present with an obvious physical syndrome of symptoms, and because enduring social perceptions about the drug were formed in decades past, when the potency of marijuana was nowhere near what it is today, there exists a lingering misperception about the severity of marijuana detox and withdrawal pains.

Marijuana Detox Is Real

They are real, they are medically recognized as such, and have been for years since a Harvard Medical School Study categorized them as a syndrome of symptoms. Marijuana detox symptoms are not physically dangerous but they can be very uncomfortable, and since the cravings during a period of marijuana detox can be so strong; marijuana detox presents a significant obstacle to sobriety and the bettering of a marijuana addiction.
Marijuana is addictive, the health risks of frequent use are many, and the benefits inherent in quitting make an attempt at detox a very good idea.

Marijuana Detox Symptoms

Marijuana detox symptoms will peak in intensity within a day of cessation of use, and only gradually start to subside after three or four days.
Symptoms include:
    • Insomnia
    • Anxiety
    • Headaches
    • Restlessness
    • Nausea
    • Loss of appetite
    • Depression
    • Aggression and irritability
    • Extreme cravings
Symptoms occur to varying degrees depending on the history and extent of abuse and personal physiology. Insomnia, anxiety and irritability are very frequently experienced.
Although you're not going to die from marijuana detox, the symptoms of withdrawal are very unpleasant, and since you feel co-occurring and intense cravings to use during the period of detox, the risks of relapse during the initial days of sobriety are high.

Marijuana Detox Treatment

No prescription medications exist for the real betterment of experienced marijuana detox symptoms, and only time will truly remove the discomforts of detox.
Sustained and vigorous exercise helps many to lessen the severity of symptoms of detox. Robust exercise can prompt the release of natural "feel good" neurotransmitters, helping to ease feelings of depression and anxiety, and sustained activity tires the body, helping somewhat with relapse provoking insomnia.
Having some form of sober support network to rely on during the initial days of temptation can help a lot and focusing your energies on activities away from temptations to use may also reduce the persistence of cravings.

Get Help for Marijuana Addiction

If you cannot quit on your own (and many cannot) you will need professional detox and treatment. Because cravings to use during the initial days overwhelm so many with the best of intentions to quit, progressing through detox in a facility away from access to marijuana may be required. Additionally, successful detox alone rarely provides a strong foundation for long term abstinence. To really stay drug free you need to develop self awareness over the root causes of your drug seeking behaviors, learn concrete and effective strategies to temptation avoidance, and learn with others how to have a good time without needing to get high.
The dangers of marijuana addiction are real; marijuana robs you of your initiative and clouds your emotions and your clarity. Marijuana use is associated with an increased risk for a number of different cancers, and also with a substantially increased likelihood towards certain psychiatric conditions.
Quitting is hard, but it's worth it, and if you can’t do it on your own, get help.


Read more: Marijuana Detox
 

Alcohol and drug abuse causes family violence.


What can you do when alcohol or drugs cause family violence?

Alcohol and drug abuse causes family violence.

Not all people who abuse alcohol or drugs will become violent, but statistically, family abusers are far more likely to also abuse drugs or alcohol, and violent abuse is far more likely to occur while the abuser is intoxicated.
In some cases, the acute effects of the high can cause aggressive, irrational and dangerous outbursts, for example, a meth addict ending a multi day binge can get paranoid, aggressive and violent. If this violence is very out of character and the addict is not otherwise aggressive or violent, then without the negative influence of drug abuse, the violence should stop.

Domestic Assault

In the case of chronic domestic violence though, although the abuser will often get violent while intoxicated, there is no evidence that the violence will stop with the end of alcohol or drug abuse. Most perpetrators of domestic violence will batter both while sober and while intoxicated. For chronic domestic assault, treatment for substance abuse issues alone will not remove the long term threat to the family, and the abuser will need to participate in additional therapy to learn how to end their violent tendencies.

Elder Abuse

Substance abuse and elder abuse, the physical, emotional or neglectful abuse of elderly relatives under the abuser's care also occurs with saddening regularity. The elderly are often targeted for violence and abuse for financial reasons, out of frustration or for no apparent reason at all. Due to their self perceived vulnerability, the elderly are far less likely to report such behaviors to the police or other authorities.

Violence Can Never be Justified

Whatever the reason and whatever the justifications given, if a loved substance abuser harms the family with violence, emotional or sexual assault, the family needs to look after itself in the interest of self preservation, and self preservation needs to come before the needs of the substance abuser.
You are no help to anyone if you are badly injured, and no matter how you may love someone, if they do you harm, they need to go, or you need to go…and the authorities need to get involved.
You cannot allow someone to terrorize you, and whatever your familial ties, there can be no excuses made for someone who would do you physical or other harms.
If you live with or feel threatened by a substance abusing family member, take steps to get safe and take them right now. If your teen son abuses you, he has to go. Call the police and have them escort him out. You still love him, you can still support his treatment, but you can no longer allow him to harm you or others in the family.
If you live with a substance abusing spouse, you need to get out before it gets worse. Get out and get safe as soon as you can, and don’t consider seeing him or her until both the violence and the substance abuse have been therapeutically addressed.
If children are at risk, get out. There is no excuse--no possible rationalization--that ever justifies the abuse of children, and you need to get them safe. Remaining in the home puts your children at risk of physical harm, of developmental delays and at risk to propagate the violence themselves as adults. There can be no tolerance for abuse to children.
If you live with adult children who abuse you, threaten you for money or emotionally terrorize you, you do not have to stay with them. Do not believe that you are better off with family. Call the police.
You may love them, worry for them and rationalize their behaviors, but once they get violent, they have to go. Call the police, learn your rights and your options, and take steps to ensure that it never happens aga


Read more: Substance Abuse and Family Violence