Treatment Centers by City
- New Haven
- Waterbury
- Hartford
- Bridgeport
- New Britain
- Norwalk
- Middletown
- Torrington
- Danbury
- Norwich
- Stamford
- Willimantic
- New London
- Enfield
- Ansonia
- Branford
- Bristol
- Greenwich
- Manchester
- Mansfield Center
- West Haven
- Danielson
- Dayville
- Derby
- Fairfield
- Groton
- Hamden
- Milford
- Stafford Springs
- Stratford
- East Hartford
- Meriden
- New Milford
- North Haven
- Plainville
- Vernon Rockville
- Bloomfield
- Glastonbury
- Jewett City
- Lebanon
- Moosup
- New Canaan
- Newington
- Putnam
- Sharon
- West Hartford
- Westport
- Bethlehem
- Canaan
- Colchester
- Cromwell
- Darien
- Durham
- Essex
- Farmington
- Kent
- Litchfield
- Madison
- Naugatuck
- North Stonington
- Old Greenwich
- Old Saybrook
- Portland
- Prospect
- Quaker Hill
- Rocky Hill
- Sandy Hook
- Shelton
- South Windsor
- Thompson
- Washington
- Windsor
- Winsted
1-855-390-6435
- Hospital of Central Connecticut
- Hospital of Central Connecticut
is located at 73 Cedar Street New Britain, CT. 6052 and can be contacted by calling 860-224-5300. Hospital of Central Connecticut offers treatment services for Illicit Drug Addiction, Alcoholism and Prescription Drug Abuse
Treatment Services Offered: Mental Balance Treatment Services, Outpatient Alcohol Treatment, Spanish Speaking, Foreign Languages other than Spanish
Payment Options: Payment Assistance Through Medicaid, Medicare Assistance, Insurance - Private Pay, Insurance - Military, Self Pay
- Contact Us
- Substance abuse treatment for alcoholism is much better than the two other alternatives, which are incarceration or eventual death from an alcohol related health condition.
- When an individual drinks alcohol, only about 20% of it is absorbed into their blood stream from the stomach.
- The University of Harvard's Health Professionals Follow up Study of 44,000 males indicated that males who drank alcohol moderately, had up to a 37% reduction in coronary artery disease.
- In 1981 the Surgeon General first advised that women should not drink alcoholic beverages during pregnancy because of the risk of birth defects.
For more information, visit www.drug-rehabs.org.