Addiction Treatment Centers King City CA

Most addiction experts agree that talk therapy and 12'step programs—considered the gold standard for addiction treatment for decades—are a necessary component of a successful recovery. But in and of themselves, such methods have not proven terribly effective.

Valley Health Associates
(831) 674-1795
495 El Camino Real, Suite K
Greenfield, CA
Services Provided
Substance abuse treatment
Types of Care
Outpatient
Special Programs/Groups
Criminal justice clients
Language Services
Spanish

Pasadena Council On Alcoholism And Drug Dependency
626/795-9127
1245 East Walnut Street #117
Pasadena, CA
Services Provided
Drug and Alcohol Information/Referral Services, Drug and Alcohol Abuse Prevention, Drunk Driving Help Programs
Membership Organizations
NCADD Affiliate

Data Provided by:
National Council On Alcoholism And Drug Dependence-Tulare County, Inc.
559/688-2994
P.O. Box 249
Tulare, CA
Services Provided
Drug and Alcohol Information/Referral Services, Drug and Alcohol Abuse Prevention, Drunk Driving Help Programs, Outpatient Drug and Alcohol Rehabilitation, Inpatient Drug and Alcohol Rehabilitation
Membership Organizations
NCADD Affiliate

Data Provided by:
National Council On Alcoholism And Drug Dependence-Orange County
949/770-0847
5 Mason Street
Irvine, CA
Services Provided
Drug and Alcohol Information/Referral Services, Drug and Alcohol Abuse Prevention, Drug and Alcohol Intervention Services, Drunk Driving Help Programs, Outpatient Drug and Alcohol Rehabilitation, Inpatient Drug and Alcohol Rehabilitation
Membership Organizations
NCADD Affiliate

Data Provided by:
National Council On Alcoholism And Drug Dependence Sacramento County, Inc
916/922-9217
2143 Hurley Way, Suite 103
Sacramento, CA
Services Provided
Drug and Alcohol Information/Referral Services, Drug and Alcohol Abuse Prevention, Outpatient Drug and Alcohol Rehabilitation, Inpatient Drug and Alcohol Rehabilitation
Membership Organizations
NCADD Affiliate

Data Provided by:
Valley Health Associates
(831) 674-1795
495 El Camino Real
Greenfield, CA
Services Provided
Substance abuse treatment
Types of Care
Outpatient
Special Programs/Groups
Criminal justice clients
Language Services
Spanish

National Council On Alcoholism And Other Drug Addictions-Bay Area
415/296-9900
944 Market Street, Third Floor
San Francisco, CA
Services Provided
Drug and Alcohol Information/Referral Services
Membership Organizations
NCADD Affiliate

Data Provided by:
National Council On Alcoholism And Drug Dependence Of The South Bay Area
310/328-1460
1334 Post Avenue
Torrance, CA
Services Provided
Drug and Alcohol Information/Referral Services, Drug and Alcohol Abuse Prevention, Drunk Driving Help Programs
Membership Organizations
NCADD Affiliate

Data Provided by:
Council On Alcoholism & Drug Abuse
805/963-1433
P.O. Box 28
Santa Barbara, CA
Services Provided
Drug and Alcohol Information/Referral Services, Drug and Alcohol Abuse Prevention
Membership Organizations
NCADD Affiliate

Data Provided by:
National Council On Alcoholism And Drug Dependence Of E. San Gabriel & Pomona Valleys
626/331-5316
4626 N. Grand Avenue
Covina, CA
Services Provided
Drug and Alcohol Information/Referral Services, Drug and Alcohol Abuse Prevention, Drunk Driving Help Programs, Employee Drug and Alcohol Abuse Assistance Programs, Outpatient Drug and Alcohol Rehabilitation
Membership Organizations
NCADD Affiliate

Data Provided by:
Data Provided by:

Beyond AA

Provided by: 

By Lisa Marshall

Bill Beilhartz had run out of options. In fact, he was close to death.

At age 44, the Denver father-of-two had just spent two weeks in the hospital for alcohol-induced ulcers in his esophagus and stomach. He’d registered a nearly lethal blood alcohol level of .675. He’d been through two failed marriages, and his tall, once-handsome frame was withered from years of drinking a half-gallon of vodka a day. Yet, his first stop after leaving the hospital? Incredibly, the liquor store.

Three days later, after being rushed to the hospital again—this time for internal bleeding—he began desperately flipping through the Yellow Pages looking for something beyond what his three previous treatment centers had offered—something that might actually work.

“They all had the same approach,” says Beilhartz, an international casino consultant who had checked himself in each time before, paying as much as $10,000 per stay. “They tell you, ‘Don’t drink,’ and that is pretty much the education they give you.”

An ad for InnerBalance Health Center, a Colorado treatment program that takes a comprehensive holistic approach to addiction, jumped out at him. The clinic prescribed such treatments as nutritional counseling, intravenous vitamin therapy, yoga, and exercise programs. “It was different than anything I’d ever heard of. And it all just made sense to me,” says Beilhartz, who checked in to the 35-day program in January 2006.

Months later, he’s healthy, hopeful, and boasting more days of sobriety than in all the past 15 years combined. “Within a week of arriving, my mind was completely clear, and I felt energized and motivated to get on with life. I hadn’t felt like that since my early 20s,” he says.

Battling brain chemistry
Beilhartz is among a growing number of addicts and alcoholics turning toward complementary and alternative therapies to address the physiological underpinnings of addiction. The programs are rooted in the theory that addiction is largely the result of skewed levels of certain chemical messengers in the brain.

With too much of some messengers and not enough of others, researchers believe, addicts are caught—often from childhood—in a state of chronic imbalance and turn to drugs and alcohol to self-medicate in an attempt to feel “normal.”

Most addiction experts agree that talk therapy and 12-step programs—considered the gold standard for addiction treatment for decades—are a necessary component of a successful recovery. But in and of themselves, such methods have not proven terribly effective. Between 70 and 85 percent of addicts completing such programs will relapse within six to 12 months, studies show. Meanwhile, some alternative clinics that incorporate both physiological and psychological approaches boast six-month sobriety rates as high as 85 percent.

“If you have a broken leg and your bone is sticking out, you aren’t going to want to sit around and talk about it. You are going to want to go to the emergency r...

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