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Alcohol Rehab Centers in Ohio

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If you’re looking for alcohol rehab in Ohio, you have many options for quality rehab. Alcohol use disorder, or alcohol addiction, is a chronic condition, and alcohol rehab programs can help you learn how to manage your misuse long term.1 There were more than 550 listed rehab facilities in Ohio in 2019.2 You will be able to find a quality alcohol rehab in Ohio to help you recover and lead a sober, happier life. Check out treatment programs in Columbus, Cleveland, Akron, Cincinnati, and beyond.

Ohio Alcohol Use Statistics

In 2019, about 17.6% of adults in Ohio reported drinking excessively, according to the National Survey of Substance Abuse Treatment Services 2019 State Profile for Ohio.3 This figure was equivalent to the national average of 17.6 reported for 2020.3 Other 2019 alcohol use statistics for Ohio from the 2019 State Profile for Ohio include:4

  • At 18.8%, college graduates engaged in excessive drinking, about 4% higher than the 14.9% of Ohio residents with only a high-school education.
  • Among adults aged 18 to 44, excessive drinking stood at 23.4%, three times higher than the 7.8% rate among adults aged 65 and older. Adults aged 45 to 64 reported an excessive drinking rate of 17.1%.
  • Men reported drinking excessively at 21.2%, compared to 14.4% for women.
  • Higher earners (income > $75,000 annually) drank more excessively than those with modest incomes.
  • Adults reported binge drinking at a rate of 16.3%. Binge drinking for a typical adult means consuming, within two hours, five or more drinks for men or four or more drinks for women.
  • Ohioans self-identifying as Hispanic reported the highest excessive drinking rates, at 21.4%. Black residents reported a rate of 15.4%. The figure was 18.1% for Whites, and 14.1% for Asians.
  • On March 29, 2019, there were 9,719 clients receiving rehab for AUD in Ohio facilities, representing 14.9% of persons receiving rehab for alcohol and drug disorders in Ohio.
  • 96 per 100,000 Ohio residents received rehab for AUD in Ohio facilities on March 29, 2019.

The National Center for Drug Abuse Statistics reports:5

  • Annually, 3,674 deaths in Ohio are attributable to excessive alcohol use.
  • Males account for 71.1% of annual deaths attributable to alcohol use in Ohio.
  • Chronic AUD is responsible for 50.7% of deaths in Ohio stemming from excessive alcohol consumption.
  • Ohioans lose 106,752 years of potential life due to alcohol annually.

Ohio residents consumed a per capita average of 2.03 gallons of alcohol per year in 2022.6 This compared to a nationwide average of 2.47, making Ohio the ninth-lowest per capita alcohol-consuming state in the nation.

How Much Does Alcohol Rehab Cost in Ohio?

Rehab costs vary considerably depending on many different factors. As a rule:

  • Because of the need for room and board, inpatient rehab is always more expensive than outpatient rehab.
  • Rehab facilities with higher quality amenities are more costly than rehabs with lower quality amenities.
  • The longer you are in rehab, the more it will cost.

The following figures can be used to help estimate the costs of alcohol rehab in Ohio near me:7

  • The estimated cost of outpatient treatment can range between less than $1,500 and about $10,000 for thirty days of treatment.
  • The estimated cost of inpatient treatment can range from about $5,000 to around $50,000, to $80,000 or more for a 30-day program.
  • An estimated cost of a seven-day medical detox can range between $1,750 and $5,600.

Low-Cost and Free Rehabs in Ohio

Having health insurance is key to substantially lowering your rehab expenses. Government rehabs serve clients who do not have insurance or other financial means to pay rehab costs. They are usually located in easily accessible population centers and provide minimal amenities. With governments’ financial resources often limited, finding an opening at a government rehab can be challenging. You may find yourself on a waiting list. To be accepted into a government rehab, you will need to provide personal and family information on your health, alcohol consumption, and prior rehab history. You will also need to demonstrate that you reside in the rehab’s state or locality and have little or no income.

Having health insurance, whether privately or government-provided Medicaid, is a key to helping keep out-of-pocket rehab costs down. Many private health insurance policies require deductibles and co-pays that you must pay out of pocket. Contact your health insurer to confirm that your coverage includes AUD rehab, as not all insurance policies do. Contact your state Medicaid provider to learn what rehab services are covered if you receive government insurance.

How Do I Pay for Alcoholism Treatment in Ohio?

If you lack private health insurance or Medicaid or Medicare coverage that does not cover or only covers part of rehab costs or don’t qualify for cost-free rehab, you have other options to obtain affordable rehab.

Choose a Program That Offers Payment Plans

Many rehabs offer clients payment plans under which you will be making installment payments to pay off your rehab costs. You must document your income, significant expenses, and perhaps owned assets to qualify. Your installments may include interest charges and late payment fees, varying widely. Before committing to a payment plan for Ohio alcohol rehab, fully understand payment plan terms, interest, and other charges. The best way to find out about the availability of payment plans is to do an Internet search or contact rehabs directly. Use the search term “rehabs with payment plans” if you do an internet search.

Apply for a Rehab Scholarship

In limited cases, rehab facilities and, to a lesser degree, corporations and nonprofits may offer scholarships to pay for all or part of rehab costs. You will need to complete an application to apply for a scholarship explaining why you need the scholarship to pay for rehab and describing your prior and current AUD history and your plans to stay sober after rehab. Contact rehabs directly to find out about scholarship availability.

Find a Sliding Scale Rehab Program

Sliding rehabs also offer scale options for clients unable to pay the rehab cost themselves. Under a sliding scale, the less your ability to pay, the lower your cost. You must document your income, significant expenses, and perhaps owned assets to qualify. The best way to find out about them is to do an internet search or contact rehabs directly.

Popular Alcohol Rehab Centers in Ohio

Ohio Addiction Recovery Center: Columbus, Ohio

Located in Grove City in the southern environs of Columbus, this rehab offers holistic therapies to accompany its core inpatient and outpatient treatment modalities. Its philosophy revolves around treating AUD as a disease and the need to incorporate life skills learning and use evidence-based psychotherapy, physical fitness, and spiritual growth as the pathway to sober living. It is a young adult and LGBTQ-friendly rehab and easily accessible off Interstate 71 and by bus transit.

Mended Reeds Services Inc.: Ironton, Ohio

This rehab is in downtown Ironton, in southeastern Ohio, along the Ohio River 20 miles northwest of Huntington, West Virginia. Mended Reed is a provider of inpatient and outpatient rehab services revolving around 30 hours per week of group therapy and individual counseling hours. Spiritual 12-Step principles and practice guide its rehab model.8 The program incorporates special treatments for at-risk youth, dual diagnosis (see below), and military clients, and the facility is LGBTQ friendly. This is a primary rehab for southeastern Ohio and provides rehab counseling via telehealth.

Cleveland Clinic Lutheran Hospital Alcohol and Drug Recovery Center (ADRC): Cleveland, Ohio

ADRC’s rehab provides high-quality, evidence-based, cost-effective AUD rehab. The Cleveland Clinic, one of the world’s most highly regarded hospital systems, operates this rehab in conjunction with Lutheran Hospital. The rehab serves a diverse clientele and places a heavy focus on social justice. Philosophically, the ADRC program emphasizes SMART Recovery.9 In contrast to 12-Step programs, SMART Recovery uses online, and in-person mutual support meetings and techniques revolving around self-empowerment to break the cycle of alcohol use and embrace lifelong sobriety.

CommQuest Addiction Recovery Services: Canton, Ohio

CommQuest is the largest provider of rehab services in Ohio’s Stark and Carroll Counties. This rehab operates facilities in Canton that provide a full spectrum of inpatient and outpatient treatment and medical detox. CommQuest also operates outpatient rehabs in nearby Alliance and Massilon. CommQuest offers a specialized MOM + ME program for pregnant dual-diagnosed clients by which it connects clients to family planning, primary care, and care coordination. It also works with a chosen delivery hospital and helps arrange housing, food, education, and employment services.

Center for Addiction Treatment: Cincinnati, Ohio

Located just north of downtown Cincinnati, this rehab provides the complete spectrum of rehab services, including inpatient and outpatient treatment and medical detox. The rehab philosophy revolves around a 12-Step program. The facility’s inpatient program is for 30-day stays. A typical daily inpatient schedule would consist of breakfast followed by group meetings in the mornings. After lunch, the client would attend educational classes on structured recreation, recovery support, family skills, drug specifics, and cultural influences. Evening activities include attending a 12-Step meeting.

Harbor Behavioral Health: Toldeo, Ohio

Located North of downtown Toldeo, Harbor is a prime rehab server for the greater Toledo area and surrounding counties. Harbor recognizes AUD is a treatable, chronic medical disease that requires treatment protocols to address thinking patterns, genetics, the environment, and a client’s life experiences. It operates AUD rehab programs for adults, children, and teens aged 11 to 17 with treatment that incorporates inpatient and outpatient detox and group, individual, and family counseling. Harbor provides a Chrysalis to Monarch program. It’s an inpatient program for women ages 18 years and older struggling with addiction. Pregnant and post-partum women are welcome.

Inpatient vs. Outpatient Alcohol Rehab in Ohio

Rehab is provided on either an inpatient or outpatient basis.10 Inpatient rehab involves residing at a rehab facility around the clock. Outpatient rehab involves living at home and attending regularly scheduled sessions at a facility. Whether inpatient or outpatient, the tenure of your rehab can extend from a week to 30 or 90 days or longer. More extended rehab generally accords with better outcomes.

Benefits of Inpatient Addiction Treatment

An assessment is used to determine the severity of your AUD. It is also used to develop an individualized service plan (ISP) tailored to your rehab needs. The assessment recommends whether you should enter inpatient or outpatient rehab, and if you need detox. The more severe your AUD, the more likely you will be recommended for inpatient rehab.

Medically assisted detox is a medical intervention to treat withdrawal. If you suddenly stop after long periods of heavy drinking, you may experience withdrawal.11 It can be severe and life-threatening. Symptoms include nausea, shakes, and sweats. You may also experience delirium tremens or DTs. DTs are characterized by confusion, high blood pressure, fever, hallucinations and delusions, paranoia, hearing voices, and thoughts of self-harm and harming others. Detox purges your body of alcohol, leaving you in a substance-free state and ready for rehab. A detox may last for up to four or five days, during which you will receive sedation. If your assessment concludes you need medical detox, you will probably be recommended for inpatient treatment, at least initially.

Upon arriving for inpatient rehab, you will have your belongings inspected. Drugs, alcohol, and weapons will be confiscated. Cell phones and laptops will be taken and stored, but you will be allowed to use them at points in the day. You will be able to have visitors while in inpatient. Many variables are involved. But as a rule, inpatient rehab leads to better outcomes than outpatient rehab, because inpatient rehab is more intensive, with fewer distractions from family, friends, and work.

Benefits of Outpatient Addiction Treatment

Outpatient rehab is usually recommended for clients with less severe AUD assessments. Outpatient rehab involves attending therapy sessions several hours a day, three to five days a week. The main benefit of outpatient rehab is that it allows you to return home each night to be with your family and go to work.

Types of Alcohol Rehabs in Ohio

Rehabs sometimes incorporate special programs that therapists and clients believe will improve client rehab outcomes.

Holistic Rehab

Holistic rehab incorporates dance, acupuncture, meditation, art therapy, yoga, and like activities into the rehab program.12The aim is to align the body, mind, and spirit on a path of lifelong abstinence by expressing thoughts and feelings through these modalities.

Christian and Faith-Based Rehab

Rehabs that incorporate religious and other spiritual and non-secular into their programs are called faith-based rehabs.13Christian-affiliated rehab is the most popular, but faith-based rehab can be affiliated with any denomination of spiritual practices and principles.

Luxury Alcohol Rehab in Ohio

Luxury rehabs provide resort-style amenities in scenic locations such as in the mountains, on the coast, on islands, or in the desert. Amenities are high quality, including room furniture, meals, and fitness and recreational facilities. Luxury rehabs are generally the most expensive type of rehab facility.

Executive Rehab

Executive rehabs are designed for clients who need frequent communications access because of their professional responsibilities. Rooms are comfortably outfitted for single or double occupancy. Clients are allowed more flexible access to cell phones and laptops. As with luxury rehabs, executive rehab is typically at the top end of costs for AUD rehab. expensive

Dual Diagnosis Rehab for Co-Occurring Disorders

Co-occurring mental health disorders often accompany the onset of AUD (see below).14 Dual diagnosis rehab involves teams of physicians, psychologists and psychiatrists, and therapists working together to foster the best outcomes for AJUD and the co-occurring disorder. Dual diagnosis situations increase the severity of both AUD and the co-occurring disorder and are among the most challenging conditions to treat.

Depression and Alcohol Addiction

AUD frequently co-occurs with depression. Clients diagnosed with AUD are 2.3 times more likely to have experienced significant depression in the past year than the general population.15 Feelings of sadness and non-worth, loss of interest in activities, friends, family, work, and leisure activities, and thoughts of self-harm are symptoms of depression. Medications called Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors (SSRI) treat depression. They stabilize serotonin, a neurotransmitter produced by the brain. It affects feelings of well-being.16 SSRI medications commonly prescribed include Celexa, Lexapro), Prozac, Paxil, and Zoloft.

Anxiety and Alcoholism

Social anxiety disorder (SAD) frequently co-occurs with AUD. The two are co-occurring in 2.4% of people’s lifetimes in the general population.17 The onset of SAD precedes an AUD diagnosis in 79.7% of co-occurring cases. Symptoms of SAD include fear of interacting with others, paranoia, and excessive worrying. Counseling and SSRI antidepressants are used to treat SAD.

PTSD and Alcohol Addiction

AUD is often diagnosed in people experiencing PTSD, post-traumatic stress disorder. PTSD is triggered by experiencing or witnessing a terrifying event. Symptoms include severe anxiety, flashbacks, and nightmares. The incidence of PTSD among combat veterans is high: Between 11% and 30% of U.S. veterans develop PTSD.18 AUD or other substance misuse disorders co-occur with PTSD over the lifetimes of 57.7% of PTSD diagnoses.19 Depression often accompanies PTSD. PTSD is treated with cognitive and dialectical behavior therapy (see below) and SSRI medications.

Bipolar Disorder and Alcohol Use Disorder

Bipolar disorder (BD) is indicated by extreme mood swings between feelings of manic well-being and depression. As many as 62% of bipolar disorder diagnoses involve co-occurrence of AUD.20 Treatment of BD involves psychotherapy and mood-stabilizing medications, antidepressants, and anti-anxiety medications.

Personality Disorders and Alcohol Addiction

Indications of personality disorders (PD) include rigid and self-destructive patterns of thinking and difficulties correctly perceiving social situations and relating to people. AUD co-occurs in about 50% of P.D. cases in some populations, although the link between the two disorders is not entirely understood.21

Types of Addiction Therapy Used in Alcohol Rehab

Several therapies are commonly used to treat AUD clients.

Cognitive Behavioral Therapy

Cognitive behavior therapy (CBT) focuses on changing how you think.22 The goal is to learn how to identify problem-causing situations that lead you to drink and learn skills to help manage your behavior without resorting to alcohol.

Dialectical Behavior Therapy

Dialectical behavior therapy (DBT) focuses on mindfulness and regulating emotional behavior. You will learn healthy ways to cope with stress, accept past mistakes, manage change, and build stronger relationships with others.23

Motivational Enhancement Therapy

Also called motivational interviewing, this therapy encourages AUD clients to focus on the positive aspects of sobriety and how these contribute to a healthy, happy and balanced life.24

Contingency Management

Contingency management involves providing rewards in exchange for positive behavioral change.25 Providing you a voucher in exchange for passing a test to determine if you have consumed alcohol would be an example of contingency management.

Group Therapy

Group therapy anchors all rehab programs. In group therapy, you will meet with other AUD rehab clients to share information on the causes and consequences of drinking alcohol. A counselor will facilitate the group. Sharing stories that can generate peer support for continued sobriety is the primary objective of group therapy.26

Family Therapy

Family problems often underlie alcohol misuse. This therapy brings families together to discuss issues and devise solutions to eliminate family conflict as a source of AUD.27

Should I Travel to Ohio for Alcohol Rehab?

You may want to travel to Ohio for rehab if:

  • Insurance you have covers rehab in Ohio.
  • You live somewhere that doesn’t offer the type of rehab available in Ohio.
  • There are family members or friends in Ohio who can provide support.

Regional Considerations in Ohio: North vs. South and City vs. Rural

Ohio is the seventh most populous in the United States, with almost 11,715.000 residents.28 There are rehab centers in the state’s most prominent metropolitan areas of Cleveland, Columbus, Cincinnati, Toledo, Akron, Dayton, and Canton. But there are also quality centers for alcohol rehab in Ohio throughout the large swaths of the state that are rural.

For most clients, a decision on where to seek rehab in Ohio will focus on:

  • Is your highest priority to find alcohol rehab in Ohio near me?
  • Will you seek inpatient or outpatient rehab?
  • Cost: You’ll want to make sure your rehab costs will be covered by health insurance or Medicaid and if the rehab offers sliding scale fees, payment plans, and scholarships.
  • Do you want to rehab in a major city like Cleveland, Columbus, or Cincinnati, or in more bucolic surroundings?
  • How necessary are amenities to a better rehab outcome for you, and do you think your outcome will be better if you rehab in holistic or faith-based rehabs?
  • Do you want to rehab at a facility specializing in treating people from the LGBTQ and non-binary communities, veterans, or teens?
  • Visitor policies vary from rehab to rehab. You’ll want to ensure the rehab’s visitor policy works for you, your family, and your friends.

Alcohol and Drug Laws in Ohio

Right to Privacy

You are entitled to have any records about AUD care treated as confidential. They generally cannot be released with your consent or court order.29

Ohio Recovery Bill of Rights

As a client of an AUD rehab, you have the following rights established in 2019 with the enactment of Ohio’s Ohio Recovery Bill of Rights as state law:30

  • To not be discriminated against based on race, ethnicity, age, color, religion, gender, national origin, sexual orientation, a disability, or any other way prohibited by law
  • To know the cost of your rehab services
  • To be treated with respect and privacy and be protected from sexual and physical violence
  • To participate in developing and revising your individualized service plan and accept or reject any service or treatment offered
  • To give informed consent to or refuse any service, treatment, or therapy, including medication, absent an emergency
  • To refuse to be video-taped or audio-recorded or photographed or observed using techniques such as one-way vision mirrors without your prior approval. Closed-circuit monitoring of common areas is allowed, not including bathrooms, or sleeping areas
  • To file a grievance and receive assistance on how to file a grievance

Employment Protections

Ohio’s Fair Employment Practice Law protects people who are or have completed a supervised AUD rehab from being subject to adverse action in the workplace when working for an employer with four or more employees.31

Intervention in Lieu of Conviction

If you are a defendant in criminal proceedings under Ohio state law, you have the right to petition a judge to consider the role alcohol use played in a crime for which you are being prosecuted. You can seek AUD rehab in place of sentencing to incarceration, and low-level offenders can ask the court to seal their conviction records.32

Resources

  1. Cleveland Clinic. (2022). Alcohol Use Disorder.
  2. Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration. (2019). National Survey of Substance Abuse Treatment Services (N-SSATS) 2019 State Profile — Ohio.
  3. Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration. (2019). National Survey of Substance Abuse Treatment Services (N-SSATS) 2019 State Profile — Ohio.
  4. National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (2021). Understanding Binge Drinking. Washington DC: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services: National Institutes of Health.
  5. National Center for Drug Abuse Statistics. (2022). Alcohol Abuse Statistics.
  6. World Population Review. (2022). Alcohol Consumption by State.
  7. National Center for Drug Abuse Statistics. (2022). Average Cost of Drug Rehab.
  8. Donovan, D. M., Ingalsbe, M. H., Benbow, J., & Daley, D.C. (2013). 12-Step interventions and mutual support programs for substance use disorders: An overview. Social Work in Public Health, 28(0), 313-332.
  9. Beck, A. K., Baker, A., Kelley, P.J., Deane, F. P., Shakeshaft, A., Hunt, D., Forbes, E., and Kelley, J.F. (2017). Protocol for a systematic review of SMART Recovery: Outcomes, process variables, and implications for research. Psychology of Addictive Behaviors, 31(1), 1-20.
  10. National Institute on Drug Abuse (n.d.). Types of Rehab Programs: A Research-based Guide
  11. Newman, R.K., Stobart Gallagher, MA, & Gomez, A.E. (2021). Alcohol Withdrawal. Bethesda: National Institutes of Health, National Center for Biotechnology Information
  12. Brown, K. (2022) What Is a Holistic Addiction Treatment Program?
  13. Grim, B.J. and Grim, M.E. (2019). Belief, behavior, and belonging: How faith is indispensable in preventing and recovering from substance abuse. Journal of Religious Health, 58(5), 1713-1750.
  14. National Alliance on Mental Illness. (2022) Substance Abuse Disorders
  15. McHugh, R, K. & Weiss, R. D. (2019). Alcohol use disorder and depressive disorders. Alcohol Research, 40(1).
  16. Banerjee, N. (2014). Neurotransmitters in alcoholism: A review of neurobiological and genetic studies. Indian Journal of Human Genetics, 20(1), 20-31.
  17. Schneier, F.R., oose, T.E., Hasin, D.S., Heimbuerg, R. G., Liu, Shang-Min, Grnt, B.F., and Blance, C. (2010) Social anxiety disorder and alcohol use disorder comorbidity in the national epidemiologic survey on alcohol and related conditions. Psychological Medicine, 40(6):977-988.
  18. Kintzle, S., Barr, N., Corletto, G. & Catsro, C. A. (2018). PTSD in U.S. veterans: The role of social connectedness, combat experience and discharge. Healthcare, 6(3), 102.
  19. Simpson, T.L. Goldenberg, S,B., Louden, D.K.N., Blakey, Hawn, S.E., Lott, A., Browne, K.C., and Kayson, D.Lehavot, K. (2021). Efficacy and acceptability of interventions for co-occurring PTSD and SUD: A meta-analysis. Journal of Anxiety Disorders.
  20. Farren, C. K., Hill, K. P., & Weiss, R. D. (2012). Bipolar disorder and alcohol use disorder: A review. Current Psychiatry Reports. 14(6): 659-666.
  21. Rosenström, T., Torvik, F.A., Ystrom, E., Czajkowski, N.O., Gillespe, N.A., Aggen, S.H., Krueger, K.S., and Rieichborn-Kjennerud, T. (2018). Prediction of alcohol use disorder using personality disorder traits: A twin study. Addiction, 113(1), 15-24.
  22. National Institute on Drug Abuse (January 2018). Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy.
  23. Cleveland Clinic. (2022). Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT).
  24. National Institute on Drug Abuse. (2018). Motivational Enhancement Therapy.
  25. Petry, N.M. (2011). Contingency management: what it is and why psychiatrists should want to use it. 35(5), 161-163.
  26. Malhotra, A. & Baker, J. (2021). Group Therapy. National Library of Medicine.
  27. National Institute of Medicine (2016). Chapter 6: Family-Based Services. In Substance Abuse: Clinical Issues in Intensive Outpatient Treatment.
  28. United States Census Bureau. (2021). 2020 Population and Housing State Data.
  29. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. (2022). Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 (HIPAA).
  30. Ohio Administrative Code. OAC 5122-26-18. Client Rights and Grievance Procedure.
  31. Ohio Revised Code Chapter 4112 – Civil Rights Commission.
  32. Ohio Rev. Code § 2951.04, Section 2951.041 – Intervention in place of conviction
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