5/4/23—Baltimore, MD. TruHealing Baltimore now offers residential addiction treatment—and will soon offer detox—at a new location on Woodlawn Drive. The center will have 44 beds, and is ASAM certified for Withdrawal Management Service Level 3.5 High Intensity Program and Level 3.7 Residential Intensive Inpatient Program. The detox level of care is slated to open by end of May. The program accepts Medicaid and various in-network insurance policies making treatment more affordable and accessible to all communities.
According to the CDC, the number of drug overdose deaths in the US rose from 48,126 in January 2015 to 106,840 in January 2022.[1] Baltimore city has one of the highest rates of overdose fatalities in the country[2], with fentanyl playing a large role; in 2020, 89.5% of overdose deaths in Baltimore involved the drug.[3]
Individuals who are detoxing from powerful substances like fentanyl and other opioids need access to quality, licensed medical care. Detoxing without supervised medical care can be physically dangerous. However, there are not enough high-quality detox centers in Baltimore to accommodate the growing need for safe detox. TruHealing Baltimore is here to fill this gap—and provide life-saving care to the community in Baltimore and the surrounding areas.
“Opening in Baltimore will help the community, as we have been experiencing a high demand for inpatient detox and residential treatment needs. Our facility is one of the few free-standing private detox and residential centers in the metro Baltimore area,” says Casey Bright, COO of TruHealing Centers and Amatus Health.
TruHealing Centers in Maryland provide an abundance of addiction treatment options, including medically monitored detox, residential care, partial hospitalization, intensive outpatient and inpatient care, and ancillary services. Once clients discharge from TruHealing Baltimore, they step down to lower levels of care at other TruHealing facilities. TruHealing Centers provides a smooth continuum of care for all clients who require additional aftercare treatment and outpatient services.
For help, please call 888-89-SOBER and speak to one of our admissions counselors today.
[1] https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/nvss/vsrr/drug-overdose-data.htm
[2] https://health.baltimorecity.gov/opioid-overdose/baltimore-city-overdose-prevention-and-response-information
[3] https://health.baltimorecity.gov/substance-use-disorder/levels-care-baltimore-city-hospitals-responding-opioid-epidemic