Treatment Centers by City
- Huntington
- Charleston
- Martinsburg
- Fairmont
- Weirton
- Clarksburg
- Morgantown
- Parkersburg
- Wheeling
- Beckley
- New Martinsville
- Princeton
- Branchland
- Bridgeport
- Buckhannon
- Elkins
- Franklin
- Grafton
- Marlinton
- Maxwelton
- Romney
- Wayne
- Weston
- Barboursville
- Belington
- Bluefield
- Chattaroy
- Danville
- Dunbar
- Fayetteville
- Glenville
- Hinton
- Kingwood
- Moorefield
- Moundsville
- Mullens
- Parsons
- Ripley
- South Charleston
- Spencer
- St. Marys
- Summersville
- Sutton
- Terra Alta
- Union
- Webster Springs
- Beaver
- Berkeley Springs
- Burlington
- Charles Town
- Crab Orchard
- Delbarton
- Harrisville
- Kearneysville
- Lewisburg
- Logan
- New Creek
- Petersburg
- Point Pleasant
- St. Albans
- Stollings
- Triadelphia
- Verdunville
- Vienna
- Welch
- Williamson
- Winfield

1-888-729-7812
- Grafton City Hospital
- Grafton City Hospital
is located at 1 Hospital Plaza Grafton, WV. 26354 and can be contacted by calling 304-265-7092. Grafton City Hospital offers treatment services for Illicit Drug Addiction, Prescription Drug Abuse and Alcoholism
Treatment Services Offered: Mental Balance Treatment Services, Outpatient Alcohol Treatment, Alcohol Day Treatment Services
Payment Options: Payment Assistance Through Medicaid, Medicare Assistance, Insurance - Private Pay, Insurance - Military, Self Pay, Payment Help
- Contact Us
- According to the National Household Survey on Drug Use and Health and the College Alcohol Study, during 2008, more than 500,000 full-time 4-year college students in the United States were unintentionally injured under the influence of alcohol.
- Alcohol abuse is a repeated pattern of drinking that may result in harm to an individual's health, personal relationships, or reduces their ability to work.
- Almost 1 in 4 college students drink alcohol 10 or more times a month, and 29% report being intoxicated 3 or more times per month.
- Because alcohol is a depressant in the body, high doses of the drug can reduce cell activity; when alcohol is removed from the cells, they recover in a way that produces a change toward stimulation. The body's attempt to produce "normalcy" often leads to over-stimulation, which is known as withdrawal ;thus, binge drinking often leads to a "hangover" (headache, increased stomach acidity, early morning awakening, etc.), and long -term heavy drinking often leads to the "shakes", delirium (hallucinations), and in some instances, seizures.
For more information, visit www.drug-rehabs.org.