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West Virginia Treatment Centers
West Virginia AA Meetings
West Virginia Area 73 Alcoholics Anonymous
Al-Anon Family Groups
West Virginia Al-Anon / Alateen
Mental Health Services
Health & Human Bureau for Behavioral Health
West Virginia Behavioral Healthcare Providers
West Virginia Behavioral Health
Well WVU Mental Health
Anonymous Groups
Greater WV Area – NA
Mountaineer Region NA
NA Wheeling West Virginia
Cocaine Anonymous – call (800) 347-8998
West Virginia Gamblers Hotline – call 855-2CALLGA
Sex Addicts Anonymous West Virginia
Marijuana Anonymous West Virginia
West Virginia Helplines
AIDS Hotline – call (800) 642-8244
Rape Crisis Center – call (304) 523-0558
West Virginia Child/Adult/Domestic Violence Abuse Hotline – call 800-352-6513
Runaway youth and family crisis center – call 800-999-9999
Treatment & Detox Guide
Mixing Valium and alcohol is the most potent mix for committing violent offences, according to new research commissioned by the Scottish Prison Service. A study of 16 and 17-year-old boys at Polmont Young Offenders Institution found that many of them had committed their offences because they had taken diazepam and alcohol together. They said it….
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One night of binge drinking, while seemingly harmless, may end up killing you. Gastroenterologist Benny Ang said that most men can stomach two units of alcohol – two beers, two shots of whisky or two glasses of wine – a day. For most women, their limit is one unit of alcohol a day. Exceed that,and….
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Anyone who’s battled a heroin addiction well knows how hard this drug can be on the body. While the “highs” from heroin may feel great, the lows can be equally painful. According to the National Institute on Drug Abuse, in 2011, as many as 4.2 million Americans reported having used heroin on at least one….
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The head of an Austin organization working on homelessness included this caveat when she sent me her group’s thought-provoking new study on homelessness and alcoholism: “These concepts, unfortunately, could easily end up as fodder for those interested in ‘shock-jock’ type of reporting,” Helen Varty, executive director of Front Steps, said in her e-mail. “That is….
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I first entered an AA meeting on July 6th, 1965. I did not like it and would have taken any other alternative were one available at the time. So, with no other alternative, I kept coming back. I did have one life saving conviction and that was that I could not drink. Not much else….
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