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La Hacienda Treatment Center


 

La Hacienda Treatment Center – Chemical addiction is a devastating disease involving body, mind and spirit. La Hacienda Treatment Center has been successfully treating this disease since 1972. Our clinical staff is one of the largest professional teams consisting of licensed physicians, counselors, and nurses who are dedicated to reversing the progressions of the compulsive craving, seeking, and use of alcohol and other drugs. Through the utilization of the latest advances in Addiction Medicine, individual and group counseling, immersion in 12-Step recovery principles and long term continuing care planning, patients find that full recovery is more than just a possibility. La Hacienda’s 32-acre campus is located 75 miles northwest of San Antonio on the Guadalupe River in the Texas Hill Country. La Hacienda offers patients a peaceful, natural environment conducive to the full recovery of body, mind, and spirit. La hacienda is licensed by the Texas Department of State Health Services (DSHS) to provide treatment/detox for alcohol and other chemical dependencies. La Hacienda is also accredited by the Joint commission on the Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations and accepts most major insurance coverage. We currently operate community outreach offices throughout Texas. There are professional La Hacienda representatives in each outreach office that offer alumni and community outreach services – counseling, intervention, support groups, education and family-oriented services. La Hacienda Treatment Center

 

Video: Saint Al's Launches Million Trauma Center Expansion

Filed under: treatment center

Each year, more than 43,000 people receive life-saving treatment at Saint Alphonsus Regional Medical Center's Emergency Department and Trauma Center, the only trauma center between Salt Lake City, Utah, and the Oregon Coast. Standing outside of the …
Read more on Boise Weekly

 

Why Early Treatment for Rheumatoid Arthritis Is So Important

Filed under: treatment center

“The older treatment model was less aggressive — doctors would see how the patient with rheumatoid arthritis felt and test treatments for a longer time,” says Diane Horowitz, MD, director of the Arthritis Center at North Shore University Hospital in …
Read more on Everyday Health