Treatment Centers by City
- Jackson
- Hattiesburg
- Meridian
- Columbus
- McComb
- Greenwood
- Biloxi
- Brandon
- Greenville
- Gulfport
- Ridgeland
- Starkville
- Tupelo
- Batesville
- Booneville
- Corinth
- Hazlehurst
- Holly Springs
- Louisville
- Natchez
- Oxford
- Philadelphia
- Picayune
- Rolling Fork
- Senatobia
- Vicksburg
- Bay St. Louis
- Brookhaven
- Byram
- Carthage
- Clarksdale
- Columbia
- Decatur
- Fayette
- Forest
- Grenada
- Houston
- Iuka
- Kosciusko
- Leakesville
- Lucedale
- Mendenhall
- Newton
- Olive Branch
- Pascagoula
- Pontotoc
- Port Gibson
- Quitman
- Raleigh
- Richton
- Sardis
- Summit
- Tutwiler
- Water Valley
- Waynesboro
- West Point
- Whitfield
- Wiggins
- Aberdeen
- Ackerman
- Amory
- Ashland
- Belzoni
- Canton
- Charleston
- Collins
- De Kalb
- Flowood
- Hernando
- Indianola
- Laurel
- Lexington
- Macon
- Magee
- Marks
- Meadville
- Moselle
- Pittsboro
- Prentiss
- Purvis
- Ripley
- Ruleville
- Saucier
- Southaven
- Tunica
- Tylertown
- Vancleave
- Winona
- Woodville
1-866-301-5732
- Millcreek of Magee Behav Healthcare
- Millcreek of Magee Behav Healthcare
is located at 900 1st Avenue NE Magee, MS. 39111 and can be contacted by calling 844-607-0644. Millcreek of Magee Behav Healthcare offers treatment services for Prescription Drug Abuse, Illicit Drug Addiction and Alcoholism
Treatment Services Offered: Mental Balance Treatment Services
Payment Options: Payment Assistance Through Medicaid, Insurance - Private Pay, Self Pay
- Contact Us
- Alcoholism generally takes about 15 years to develop, but can happen much quicker in adolescents and young adults.
- Underage drinking plays a huge role as related to teens and risky sexual activity, according to research by the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA).
- Alcohol also may interfere with normal sperm structure and movement by blocking the metabolism of vitamin A, which is essential for sperm development.
- Not every child of an alcoholic will develop alcoholism; some children of alcoholics make the conscious choice not to drink at all; conversely, many people with no family history of alcoholism may become alcoholics.
For more information, visit www.drug-rehabs.org.