Treatment Centers by City
- Columbia
- Greenville
- Charleston
- Aiken
- Spartanburg
- Sumter
- Anderson
- Beaufort
- Conway
- Florence
- Lexington
- Rock Hill
- Orangeburg
- Chesterfield
- Georgetown
- Greenwood
- Greer
- Hartsville
- Kingstree
- Manning
- North Charleston
- Ridgeland
- Seneca
- Summerville
- Walterboro
- Abbeville
- Allendale
- Barnwell
- Camden
- Chester
- Clinton
- Darlington
- Dillon
- Easley
- Edgefield
- Gaffney
- Lancaster
- Marion
- Moncks Corner
- Myrtle Beach
- Newberry
- West Columbia
- Winnsboro
- Awendaw
- Bamberg
- Batesburg
- Bennettsville
- Bishopville
- Bluffton
- Denmark
- Duncan
- Fort Mill
- Gaston
- Goose Creek
- Hampton
- Hilton Head Island
- Holly Hill
- Hopkins
- Lake City
- Liberty
- Mc Cormick
- North Augusta
- Parris Island
- Pickens
- Ruby
- Saluda
- Simpsonville
- St. Matthews
- Travelers Rest
- Union
- Varnville
1-877-483-4583
- Carolina Center for Behavioral Health
- Carolina Center for Behavioral Health
is located at 2700 East Phillips Road Greer, SC. 29650 and can be contacted by calling 864-235-2335. Carolina Center for Behavioral Health offers treatment services for Prescription Drug Abuse, Illicit Drug Addiction and Alcoholism
Treatment Services Offered: Mental Balance Treatment Services, Outpatient Alcohol Treatment, Inpatient Hospital Treatment, Over 50, Hearing Impaired Clients
Payment Options: Medicare Assistance, Insurance - Private Pay, Insurance - Military, Self Pay
- Contact Us
- According to the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA), about one-quarter of heavy drinkers will develop alcoholic hepatitis, which causes the liver to become inflamed and cells to die.
- College aged students that were heavy drinkers reported a much higher likelihood of recognizing the symptoms of alcohol poisoning in another student and providing the necessary assistance; students who are not familiar with the effects of alcohol may not recognize that help is needed.
- The main difference between alcoholism (pathological alcohol dependence) and willful alcohol abuse is whether a person can stop drinking at will; if they cannot, then there is "impaired control" over their alcohol use, which is the primary indicator of an alcohol addiction.
- Many different medical based studies related to alcohol have reported that women absorb and metabolize alcohol much differently than men; thus rendering women more vulnerable than men to alcohol-induced liver, heart and brain damage.
For more information, visit www.drug-rehabs.org.