SUBSTANCE ABUSE SERVICES | |
Detoxification Services | |
Outpatient and Self-Help Services | |
Inpatient/Residential Rehabilitation and Continuing Care Facilities | |
Detoxification Services | |
Frederick Health Hospital Emergency Department | |
400 West Seventh Street | |
MedStar Montgomery Medical Center | |
18101 Prince Philip Drive | |
University of Maryland Medical Center Midtown Campus | |
827 Linden Avenue | |
Outpatient and Self-Help Services | |
Brook Lane Health Services | |
13218 Brook Lane
Brook Lane is a non-profit mental health facility with more than 550 employees in four locations. The main campus in Hagerstown is home to a 57-bed hospital, one of only two private mental health inpatient facilities in the state of Maryland. We provide partial hospitalization (a day treatment program) for both adults and children on the main campus and a child and adolescent program in Frederick. Laurel Hall special education school has two locations: one on the main campus and one in Frederick. We have two outpatient locations, North Village in Hagerstown and Buckeystown Pike in Frederick. Both locations have licensed clinical staff who offer therapy for all ages, as well as the THRIVE program for children. Our InSTEP program at North Village provides level 1 outpatient treatment and level 2.1 intensive outpatient treatment options for substance use. Our School Based Mental Health program embeds Brook Lane therapists in most of the Washington and Frederick County Schools, ready to provide needed therapy on site. Brook Lane also continues to be the leading provider of mental and behavioral health continuing education seminars and free community programs in this region. | |
Frederick County Health Department Behavioral Health Services Division | |
300-B Scholl’s Lane
The Frederick County Health Department Behavioral Health Services Division has been delivering alcohol and drug treatment and prevention services since 1970. Offering a continuum of services, the division provides the highest quality of services while keeping up with the ever-changing demands of Frederick County citizens. The agency provides a continuum of care including Prevention; Adult and Adolescent Outpatient Treatment Programs, including Intensive Outpatient Programs (IOPs), Ambulatory Detoxification/Stabilization Program; Medication Assisted Treatment; and Detention Center Men’s and Women’s Intensive Programs. Halfway house services are provided by Gale Recovery, Inc. Prevention programming includes programs for children and youth, smoking cessation and tobacco education opportunities, and materials for health fairs, speaking engagements, and community events. Treatment services for adolescents include educational classes and regular and intensive outpatient services. Services for adults include regular and intensive outpatient services, medication-assisted services, court assessments, ambulatory detoxification, and intensive services for inmates at the Frederick County Adult Detention Center. Recovery services including transportation, educational, and other life skills assistance is available for those who qualify. | |
Private, For-Profit Providers Offering Sliding Scale Fees | |
Catoctin Counseling Center | |
309 East Patrick Street
228 East Washington Street
112 East Main Street
69 East Main Street | |
Mountain Manor Treatment Center | |
174 Thomas Johnson Drive | |
MRB Counseling Services, Inc. | |
5 Hillcrest Drive, Suite B200
101 Chestnut Street, Suite 110
1835 University Boulevard, Suite 220 | |
Inpatient/Residential Rehabilitation and Continuing Care Facilities | |
Frederick Rescue Mission Beacon House | |
419 West South Street
Provides a one year intensive Changed Life Recovery Program for men with substance abuse disorders. Men must be physically able to attend Christian curriculum classes and participate in work therapy. Program participants are not permitted to work outside of the program. Part time employment may be provided by a local retreat and conference center. All finances are managed by the program with special financial requirements. | |
Massie Unit | |
P.O. Box 1722
State-operated inpatient rehabilitation for adults with drug/alcohol addiction. Services are primarily for residents of the State of Maryland. Applicant may contact the Admission Coordinator at above phone number. Transportation is available. Fee is on a sliding scale for Maryland residents. | |
Mountain Manor Treatment Center, Inc. | |
9701 Keysville Road
Provides adult male and female residents with medically monitored inpatient detoxification services, medically managed intensive inpatient services, and intensive outpatient services and partial hospitalization. Admissions can be arranged any time of day, 7 days a week. Admissions are arranged after a clinical determination that the inpatient level of care is appropriate, along with approval from the insurance provider or state/county agency funding personnel. Transportation for admissions will be provided upon request. Mountain Manor accepts most forms of private insurance, Medicaid (Medical Assistance), Primary Adult Care (PAC), and various State and County funding resources. A sliding fee scale is offered to those in need.
Safe Harbor is a residential program for pregnant and post-partum substance abusing women who enter treatment with their children and infants, thus eliminating a major obstacle to treatment. Services offered include an approved nursery, child care, after-school tutoring, parenting classes, vocational preparation, and a step-down transition track that leads to community integration. New Horizons is a long term residential treatment program for justice system involved men and women with substance and mental health issues. | |
Shoemaker Center | |
P.O. Box 308
This inpatient adult residential treatment facility offers medical assessment to evaluate level of care needed with trained medical staff on duty 24 hours a day. Certified and licensed counselors or social workers offer individual counseling, and various forms of group therapy, including lectures, confrontational groups, discussion groups, and meditative groups. Treatment involves the individual with the addiction, plus family and/or significant others for education, referrals, and further family treatment to ensure understanding of the disease concept. Serves both men and women age 18 and older. Sliding fee scale when proof of income provided. Serves Carroll, Frederick, Harford, Howard, and Baltimore counties for males; statewide for females. | |
Southeast New Life for Girls | |
806 Littlestown Pike
A non-profit, nondenominational Christian drug and alcohol residential program for women age 18 to 45. The length of the program is approximately 12 to 18 months; 3 to 6 months in the Westminster Center and about 9 months at the Main Training Center in Dover, PA. A one time non-refundable application fee of $100 is required. There is no cost for treatment, but any medical expense incurred by the student is her responsibility. Student must arrive with a return ticket. | |
Wells House | |
427 East Patrick Street
Wells House @ Gale Recovery, provides substance use disorder treatment that includes Outpatient, Intensive Outpatient, Low intensity residential and transitional housing services. The program serves residents of Maryland over the age of 18. Admission criteria is based on that stated in the ASAM Criteria, consisting of the following six evaluation dimensions: Acute Intoxication and/or Withdrawal Potential; Biomedical Conditions and Complications; Emotional/Behavioral/Cognitive Conditions and Complications; Readiness to Change; Relapse/Continued Use/Continued Problem Potential; and Recovery/Living Environment. As patients progress through treatment, services are focused on continued engagement and assessment of the stages of change. Evidence-based practices include patient-centered counseling, cognitive behavioral counseling, motivational interviewing and problem solving strategies. Self-directed treatment plan goals, focused on the individual’s specific areas of need, are developed for each patient. Individualized treatment planning that targets specific needs such as food, clothing, housing, transportation, medical care, mental health care, employment, and education, incentives patients to remain in needed treatment, thereby reducing substance use and increasing their chances of continuing their recovery. Therapeutic environments, combined with the evidence based practices employed at the Wells House assist patients with how they relate to their environment, improving their recovery skills, relapse prevention skills, and emotional coping skills, thereby increasing the patients’ self-worth. Patients have the opportunity to develop and practice their interpersonal and group living skills, strengthen their recovery skills, reintegrate into the community and family and begin or resume employment or academic pursuits. | |
Last updated 12/1/2021 | |