Treatment Centers by City
- Portland
- Eugene
- Salem
- Corvallis
- Medford
- Grants Pass
- Klamath Falls
- Pendleton
- Roseburg
- Beaverton
- Bend
- Hillsboro
- McMinnville
- Prineville
- St. Helens
- Newport
- Oregon City
- Redmond
- Gresham
- Springfield
- Albany
- Enterprise
- Forest Grove
- Hood River
- La Grande
- Lincoln City
- Madras
- Newberg
- North Bend
- Ontario
- White City
- Arlington
- Ashland
- Astoria
- Baker City
- Boardman
- Brookings
- Condon
- Dallas
- Fossil
- Gladstone
- Heppner
- John Day
- Lakeview
- Sandy
- Seaside
- The Dalles
- Tillamook
- Christmas Valley
- Coos Bay
- Cottage Grove
- Gold Beach
- Happy Valley
- Harrisburg
- Hermiston
- Hines
- Jefferson
- Junction City
- Lebanon
- Milton Freewater
- Monmouth
- Phoenix
- Scappoose
- Silverton
- Stayton
- Troutdale
- Tualatin
- Umatilla
- Vernonia
- Waldport
- Warrenton
- Wilsonville
- Woodburn
1-877-469-6378
- Samaritan Regional Mental Health
- Samaritan Regional Mental Health
is located at 3509 NW Samaritan Drive Corvallis, OR. 97330 and can be contacted by calling 541-768-5266. Samaritan Regional Mental Health offers treatment services for Illicit Drug Addiction, Prescription Drug Abuse and Alcoholism
Treatment Services Offered: Mental Balance Treatment Services, Inpatient Hospital Treatment, Hearing Impaired Clients
Payment Options: Payment Assistance Through Medicaid, Medicare Assistance, Insurance - Private Pay, Insurance - Military, Self Pay
- Contact Us
- Alcohol use depresses the nerves that control involuntary actions such as breathing and the gag reflex, which is in place to prevent an individual from choking ; a fatal dose of alcohol may eventually stop these functions altogether.
- The alcoholic-beverage industry contributed an estimated $4 million to federal candidates and parties in the 2006 election cycle alone.
- An estimated 6 % of the offspring of alcoholic women have Fetal Alcohol Syndrome (FAS); the FAS risk for offspring born after a FAS sibling, is as much as 70%.
- According to the American Automobile Association, teens that have over five drinks are over ninety times more likely to die in a car crash than compared to a sober driver.
For more information, visit www.drug-rehabs.org.