Treatment Centers by City
- Phoenix
- Tucson
- Mesa
- Prescott
- Casa Grande
- Tempe
- Scottsdale
- Glendale
- Yuma
- Chandler
- Prescott Valley
- Flagstaff
- Bullhead City
- Kingman
- Apache Junction
- Gilbert
- Globe
- Sierra Vista
- Benson
- Wickenburg
- Winslow
- Bisbee
- Cottonwood
- Douglas
- Peoria
- Lake Havasu City
- Nogales
- Payson
- Avondale
- Clifton
- Coolidge
- Laveen
- Maricopa
- Safford
- Sedona
- Show Low
- Arizona City
- Camp Verde
- Fredonia
- Green Valley
- Hereford
- Holbrook
- Littlefield
- Marana
- Oracle
- Page
- Parker
- Sacaton
- San Luis
- San Manuel
- Sells
- Snowflake
- Springerville
- Surprise
- Buckeye
- Dewey
- Eagar
- El Mirage
- Eloy
- Fort Defiance
- Ganado
- Kayenta
- Kearny
- Lakeside
- Mayer
- Paradise Valley
- Peach Springs
- Polacca
- Sahuarita
- San Carlos
- St. Johns
- Superior
- Tolleson
- Tuba City
- Wellton
- Willcox
- Williams
1-855-289-7023
- Oasis Behavioral Health
- Oasis Behavioral Health
is located at 2190 North Grace Boulevard Chandler, AZ. 85225 and can be contacted by calling 480-917-9301. Oasis Behavioral Health offers treatment services for Alcoholism, Prescription Drug Abuse and Illicit Drug Addiction
Treatment Services Offered: Mental Balance Treatment Services, Outpatient Alcohol Treatment, Dual Diagnosis, Court Appointed Client Services, Hearing Impaired Clients, Spanish Speaking
Payment Options: Payment Assistance Through Medicaid, Medicare Assistance, Insurance - Private Pay, Insurance - Military, Self Pay, Payment Help
- Contact Us
- Vomiting is part of the automatic defense system of the body which is activated in order to prevent more alcohol from being absorbed.
- The only way for an individual with an alcoholism problem can achieve a state of long term abstinence, is to face the underlying problems that initially led to the alcohol abuse; these problems can be from an inability to manage stress effectively, unresolved trauma from childhood, depression, anxiety or any number of personal difficulties.
- For each year that the onset of alcohol consumption is delayed, the risk of later alcohol dependence is reduced by 14 percent.
- A new animal study suggests that a chemical in the brain called galanin produces a "positive feedback loop" that increases the craving for alcohol.
For more information, visit www.drug-rehabs.org.