Call
888-647-0579
to speak with an alcohol or drug abuse counselor.
Who Answers?
Utah Treatment Centers
Utah AA Meetings
Utah Area 69 Alcoholics Anonymous
Utah Spanish AA
Al-Anon Family Groups
Utah Al-Anon / Alateen
Mental Health Services
Utah Department of Human Services Substance Abuse & Mental Health
NAMI Utah
Valley Mental Health
Utah Mental Health Counselors Association
Anonymous Groups
Utah Region of NA
Southern Utah Area of NA
Central Utah Area of Narcotics Anonymous
Utah Cocaine Anonymous
Utah Marijuana Anonymous
Utah Sexaholics Anonymous
Utah Helplines
AIDS Information Line – call (800) 366-2437
Utah Suicide Hotline – call (435) 843-3520
Child Abuse / Neglect Hotline – call 855-323-3237
Elder Abuse Hotline – call 800-371-7897
Utah Domestic Violence Hotline – call (801) 521-5544
Utah Youth / Children’s Hotline – call 800-233-1200
Rape Recovery Center Hotline – call 801-467-7273
Sexual Assault Hotline – call 907-586-3650
Treatment & Detox Guide
Cocaine is one of the most widely used and abused drugs in the United States. Crack addiction is a dangerous condition that results from the use of crack cocaine. Left untreated, crack addiction can kill an individual, but there are treatment centers that specialize in treating crack addiction. Crack addiction treatment is similar to many….
Continue reading ›
Addiction is a term that is used to describe a recurring compulsion by the person that engages him in a particular activity, inspite of the harmful consequences to their health and social life. It is accepted all over that addiction is a disease and a state of psychological dependence on something that can have damaging….
Continue reading ›
Restaurants in Germany legally sell alcohol to teenagers after their sixteenth birthdays and French children drink wine with dinner at an early age, but U.S. parents who follow this relaxed European example, believing it fosters a healthier attitude toward alcohol, should be careful — it may increase the likelihood that their children binge drink in….
Continue reading ›
Despite the Surgeon General’s warning that alcohol can affect unborn children, pregnant women haven’t changed their drinking habits much over the past two decades, the CDC said. The average annual percentage of pregnant women who drank remained relatively stable at about 12% for any alcohol use and 2% for binge drinking, C. H. Denny, Ph.D.,….
Continue reading ›
Nova Scotia still has a drinking problem. People in the province still drive drunk, still go on benders at bars, still drink underage and some drink while pregnant. To combat this, last August the provincial Department of Health Promotion and Protection launched a strategy called Changing the Culture of Alcohol Use in Nova Scotia. Almost….
Continue reading ›