44 Treatment Centers in Dayton, OH
Browse 44 SAMHSA-verified addiction treatment programs in Dayton. Compare care levels, insurance accepted, and get connected with the right facility — free, confidential 24/7 helpline.
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Treatment available in Dayton
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Dayton treatment map — facilities across Montgomery County
Every pin is a SAMHSA-verified facility. Click for name, treatment levels, and phone number. Use the filter pills to narrow by care level.
Dayton treatment directory — what you need to know
149
fatal overdoses in Montgomery County in 2025 — down from a 2017 projection of 800. Fourth consecutive annual decline. Source
81%
of 2023 overdose decedents in Montgomery County had illicit fentanyl present — with cocaine in 44% and methamphetamine in 34%. Source
$3.86M
OneOhio Region 9 opioid-settlement allocation in 2024, funding 14 Dayton-area projects including Dayton Children's Hospital, Kettering Medical, and Wright State. Source
ORC 2925.11
Ohio Good Samaritan statute — calling 911 for an overdose provides immunity from minor-possession charges if the caller completes a 30-day treatment screening. Source
The Montgomery County overdose story — from epicenter to model
Dayton was declared the US overdose capital in 2017, when Montgomery County was on pace for 800 fatal overdoses. In 2025, 149 people died. No other American metro has reversed the curve this fast.
In 2017, Montgomery County recorded the highest per-capita drug overdose mortality rate of any county in the United States. NBC News opened its August coverage with the phrase "mass casualty event," citing the coroner's projection of 800 overdose deaths for the year. That year, Dayton became shorthand in the national opioid conversation for what an out-of-control fentanyl epidemic looks like in a mid-sized American city.
The 2025 number is **149**. That is not a data-cleaning artifact. The Montgomery County Community Overdose Action Team (COAT) has now recorded four consecutive years of annual declines — from roughly 316 deaths in 2022, to 292 in 2023, to 176 preliminary in 2024, to 149 in 2025. Dawn Schwartz, COAT program manager, told local reporters in January 2026 that the mindset shift — treating addiction as "a brain disease" rather than a moral failing — changed both the public-health response and the willingness of families to seek help.
Fentanyl still drives the fatalities that remain. In 2023, illicit fentanyl was present in 81% of Montgomery County overdose decedents, per the 2023 COAT Annual Report. Cocaine was present in 44%, marijuana in 41%, methamphetamine in 34% — polysubstance exposure is now the rule, not the exception. The 2024 figure is preliminary and will be finalized later in 2026; Ohio-statewide data from the Ohio Department of Health shows fentanyl or its analogues in 78% of unintentional OD deaths statewide.
What produced the Dayton turnaround
Montgomery County distributed 7,175 naloxone kits in 2023 alone — a 45% year-over-year increase. Project DAWN (Deaths Avoided With Naloxone) runs a weekly Wednesday distribution at 601 Edwin C. Moses Blvd, Door F, and the Public Health Department of Dayton-Montgomery County seeds community organizations with bulk supply. The Dayton Fire Department also operates a leave-behind naloxone program for households after a revival.
Ohio Medicaid's elimination of prior authorization for medication for opioid use disorder (MOUD) in 2022 removed a 24–72 hour wait from buprenorphine initiation. Paired with Samaritan CrisisCare's 24/7 walk-in model at 601 Edwin C. Moses Blvd, a same-day prescription is now routinely filled the day someone asks for help.
The $808M OneOhio opioid settlement allocated $3.86M to Region 9 (Montgomery County / Dayton) in the 2024 cycle, funding 14 projects at Dayton Children's Hospital, Kettering Medical, Wright State University, Bridget's Path, and the Dayton Street Medicine Project. State and county levy dollars administered by the Montgomery County ADAMHS Board pay for treatment slots for uninsured residents.
For a family searching for help in Dayton today, the improving trend is real but the fentanyl danger has not left. The infrastructure detailed in the sections below — 12 anchor providers, a 24/7 county crisis line, a statutory immunity law for bystanders, and a settlement-funded scholarship ecosystem — is the system that produced the four-year decline.
Dayton crisis and helpline numbers
If you are in immediate danger, call 911. Otherwise, any of the following are free, confidential, and available 24/7 unless noted.
Where Dayton's addiction care actually happens
Dayton's treatment system is anchored by two academic health systems (Premier Health / Samaritan and Kettering Health), one federally funded community mental-health authority (South Community), and a dozen non-profit and outpatient providers — including several of the nation's longest-running social-model residential programs.
Nova Behavioral Health
Nova Behavioral Health is the largest residential detox-to-IOP provider in Dayton, serving adults with substance-use and co-occurring mental-health disorders. Nova contracts with the Montgomery County ADAMHS Board and accepts Medicaid plus most commercial plans; uninsured residents reach Nova through the ADAMHS-funded 24/7 line at 833-580-2255. Nova's 24-hour admission line is 1-800-750-0750.
Samaritan Behavioral Health — Premier Health
Samaritan CrisisCare, operated by Premier Health, is the 24/7 walk-in crisis stabilization center for Montgomery County. A person can walk in without an appointment, without insurance, regardless of ability to pay — assessment, initial stabilization, and connection to treatment happen in one visit. The crisis line **(937) 224-4646** is the single most-called number in the Dayton treatment system.
Kettering Health Behavioral Medicine Center
Kettering Health Behavioral Medicine Center provides medically managed inpatient detox (ASAM Level 3.7-WM), inpatient psychiatric care, and co-occurring disorder treatment. Medicaid, Medicare, Tricare, and major commercial plans accepted. Kettering Medical Center received settlement funds in the 2024 OneOhio Region 9 cycle to expand peer-recovery staffing in its emergency departments.
Woodhaven Residential Treatment
Woodhaven offers ASAM Level 3.5 residential detox and stepped-down PHP/IOP care on a single campus. Contracted with ADAMHS for uninsured placement; Medicaid accepted.
BrightView Health — Dayton
BrightView Health runs a same-day outpatient MAT model — buprenorphine or naltrexone initiation on the first visit, often within a few hours. Medicaid accepted first-position; 24/7 intake line 888-502-4571.
South Community Inc.
South Community Inc. is a community behavioral-health agency integrating primary care, SUD treatment, and mental-health services on sliding scale. Contracted with ADAMHS and all six Ohio Medicaid MCOs.
Eastway Behavioral Healthcare
Eastway Behavioral Healthcare operates community mental-health outpatient, SUD treatment, crisis stabilization, and supportive housing across Dayton. 1-800-496-3776 is the 24/7 access number.
DeCoach Recovery Centre — Dayton
DeCoach provides outpatient Suboxone / Vivitrol maintenance and individual counseling. Medicaid accepted.
Miami Valley Recovery
Miami Valley Recovery co-locates with Woodhaven on the Elizabeth Place campus, handling outpatient follow-up after residential discharge.
Mahajan Therapeutics — Dayton
Mahajan Therapeutics is a physician-led office-based opioid treatment practice on N Main Street; buprenorphine/naltrexone with concurrent counseling.
Fresh Start Behavioral Health
Fresh Start Behavioral Health integrates sober-living housing with wraparound case management and outpatient counseling — an important pathway for individuals leaving residential or jail-based treatment.
FQHCs — Community Health Centers of Greater Dayton
For uninsured or underinsured residents, federally qualified health centers in the Dayton metro apply sliding-scale fees tied to household income, prescribe buprenorphine, and refer to higher levels of care. Search the HRSA health center finder for nearby locations.
What rehab actually costs in Dayton — and who pays
Ohio expanded Medicaid in 2014; six managed-care organizations serve Montgomery County; no prior authorization is needed to start medication for opioid use disorder since 2022.
Ohio Medicaid covers the full ASAM continuum — outpatient (Level 1.0), intensive outpatient (2.1), partial hospitalization (2.5), residential (3.1 / 3.3 / 3.5), medically monitored inpatient (3.7), and medically managed inpatient (4.0). Methadone, buprenorphine, and naltrexone are all covered.
In Montgomery County, Ohio Medicaid is delivered through six managed-care organizations: Aetna Better Health of Ohio, Anthem Blue Cross Blue Shield, Buckeye Health Plan, CareSource Ohio, Humana Healthy Horizons, Molina Healthcare, and UnitedHealthcare Community Plan. Differences between them lie in provider networks, not covered services. Ohio Medicaid also runs a separate OhioRISE plan for children with complex behavioral health needs.
A 2022 rule change by the Ohio Department of Medicaid removed prior-authorization requirements for initiation of medication for opioid use disorder (MOUD). A buprenorphine prescription written during a Samaritan CrisisCare walk-in visit can be filled the same day on Medicaid without a 24–72 hour PA window.
For uninsured residents, Dayton's system is built around the Montgomery County ADAMHS Board. The board contracts with Nova, Samaritan, Eastway, South Community, DeCoach, and Woodhaven to purchase treatment "slots" using state and county levy dollars plus block-grant funds. The walk-in pathway: call 833-580-2255 (24/7 Crisis Now Hotline), receive triage and screening, ADAMHS authorizes funding, placement happens at a contracted provider. The Dayton Street Medicine Project, funded in the 2024 OneOhio cycle, also serves unhoused populations without the phone intake step.
Self-pay rates at commercial residential programs in Dayton typically run $12,000–$28,000 for a 30-day inpatient stay, often lower than coastal markets. Ask any facility whether it holds settlement-funded scholarship beds financed by the $808M OneOhio distribution — the 2024 Region 9 grants substantially expanded this pool.
Ohio Good Samaritan law, OARRS, and Dayton drug court
Calling 911 for someone overdosing in Dayton is legally protected under ORC 2925.11(B)(2)(b) — but the immunity comes with a 30-day treatment-screening condition and does not cover trafficking, warrants, or other offenses.
- Citation
- ORC 2925.11(B)(2)(b)
- Short title
- Ohio Good Samaritan overdose-immunity provision
- Enacted by
- House Bill 110 (131st General Assembly)
- Effective
- September 13, 2016
Ohio's Good Samaritan overdose-immunity provision is at ORC 2925.11(B)(2)(b), enacted via House Bill 110 (131st General Assembly), effective September 13, 2016.
The statute provides that a "qualified individual" — the overdose victim, or another person seeking medical help for them — shall not be arrested, charged, prosecuted, convicted, or penalized for a minor drug possession offense (misdemeanor or fifth-degree felony possession under ORC Chapter 2925) if the evidence supporting the offense was obtained as a result of seeking or receiving emergency medical assistance for the overdose.
Ohio's provision is narrower than most states' Good Samaritan laws in two important ways. First, within 30 days of seeking medical assistance, the qualified individual must obtain a screening and referral for treatment from a community addiction services provider (such as Samaritan CrisisCare or Nova Behavioral Health) and provide proof of compliance to law enforcement if requested. Failure to complete screening forfeits the immunity. Second, the statute caps the benefit at two prior uses — someone who has received Good Samaritan immunity twice in the past cannot claim it a third time.
What the immunity does NOT cover
- Trafficking offenses, aggravated trafficking, or aggravated possession
- Individuals currently on community control, parole, or post-release control
- Individuals who have received this immunity twice previously
- Outstanding warrants, probation or parole violations
- Offenses unrelated to the overdose event (DUI, firearms, child endangerment, assault)
In plain terms: if you call 911 for someone overdosing in Dayton, the responding Dayton Police Department officer cannot charge you with minor possession for drugs they find at the scene — provided you complete a treatment screening within 30 days. The officer can still arrest on a warrant, on a trafficking-volume find, or on separate conduct. A plain-language explainer is available from Ohio State University's START project.
OARRS — Ohio prescription monitoring
Ohio's prescription drug monitoring program is OARRS — the Ohio Automated Rx Reporting System, administered by the State of Ohio Board of Pharmacy. Since January 1, 2015, every licensed prescriber of opioid analgesics or benzodiazepines must register an OARRS account and, per Ohio Admin. Code 4731-11-11, request and review at least 12 months of OARRS history before initially prescribing, and re-query at intervals not exceeding 90 days for continuing treatment. Patients concerned about their own OARRS record can request a copy through the OARRS patient portal.
Montgomery County Drug Court
Non-violent defendants with substance use disorders in Dayton may be eligible for Montgomery County Common Pleas Drug Court, a treatment-supervised diversion program. Successful completion typically results in dismissal or reduction of underlying charges. Eligibility is determined at arraignment; defense counsel or the Montgomery County Public Defender's Office can initiate the referral.
Harm reduction, Project DAWN naloxone, and mutual aid in Dayton
Dayton's four-year overdose decline was built on saturation naloxone distribution, ADAMHS-funded treatment slots, and a dense mutual-aid network.
- Location
- 601 Edwin C. Moses Blvd, Door F, Dayton, OH 45417
- Hours
- Wednesdays 12:00 PM — no appointment, no ID
- Phone
- (937) 224-4646
- Website
- louisvilleky.gov/public-health
Project DAWN (Deaths Avoided With Naloxone) is Ohio's state-sponsored community naloxone distribution program. In Dayton, Project DAWN runs a weekly Wednesday walk-up at Samaritan CrisisCare, 601 Edwin C. Moses Blvd, Door F. No ID, no appointment, no questions about eligibility — anyone who might witness an overdose leaves with naloxone kits and training. In 2023 alone, Montgomery County distributed 7,175 kits (+45% YoY) through Project DAWN and partner channels.
Naloxone outside Project DAWN
Under Ohio's statewide pharmacy standing order, any licensed pharmacist in Dayton can dispense naloxone without a patient-specific prescription. The Public Health Dayton-Montgomery County naloxone map lists additional distribution partners. The Dayton Fire Department operates a leave-behind program, offering naloxone kits to households after a revival. Montgomery County Jail distributes naloxone kits to individuals at release.
Mutual-aid recovery networks
The Dayton Area Intergroup of Alcoholics Anonymous maintains a searchable directory of roughly 300 weekly AA meetings across Montgomery County and the surrounding Miami Valley, including in-person, hybrid, LGBTQ+-focused, women's-only, young-people's, and Spanish-speaking formats. Narcotics Anonymous meetings are listed at naohio.org. SMART Recovery and Refuge Recovery meetings also run weekly in Dayton.
Recovery community and street medicine
Peer-run recovery community centers in Dayton include the Families of Addicts (FOA) network and Fresh Start Behavioral Health's alumni services. The Dayton Street Medicine Project, funded by the 2024 OneOhio settlement cycle, brings treatment, naloxone, wound care, and MAT initiation directly to unhoused populations across downtown Dayton and encampment sites.
Dayton neighborhoods and ZIP codes
Treatment access and overdose burden concentrate differently across Dayton's districts. The nine areas below cover most of the city's treatment footprint.
Downtown Dayton
Samaritan CrisisCare walk-in at 601 Edwin C. Moses Blvd, ADAMHS Board HQ on E. Monument Ave, Project DAWN weekly Wednesday distribution. Highest daytime treatment density.
Oregon Historic District
Dense entertainment corridor on 5th Street; harm-reduction outreach and peer-support community. Reminders here post the 2019 tragedy grounded the recovery-community investment.
East Dayton / Belmont
Nova Behavioral Health (732 Beckman St) anchor; Eastway Behavioral Healthcare (600 Wayne Ave); high-need tract per Public Health Dayton-Montgomery County data.
Fairgrounds / 5 Oaks / Riverdale
Kettering Health and Grandview Medical Center hospital campuses nearby; residential recovery housing clusters along N. Main.
North Main corridor (Northridge)
Mahajan Therapeutics (6300 N Main St) and Fresh Start Behavioral Health (7030 N Main St) — office-based MAT + sober living cluster.
West Dayton / Westwood
Historically under-served; Woodhaven Residential (1 Elizabeth Pl) and Miami Valley Recovery on the Elizabeth Place campus. FQHC access is the entry point for uninsured residents.
South Dayton / Kettering edge
Kettering Health Behavioral Medicine Center (5350 Lamme Rd), South Community Inc. (3095 Kettering Blvd). Suburban outpatient and inpatient concentration.
Huber Heights
Northeastern suburb; several Medicaid-accepting outpatient clinics and BrightView satellite access. Feeds Wright-Patterson AFB commuter base.
South End / Miami Twp
BrightView Dayton main campus (8120 Garnet Dr); commuter suburban outpatient anchor for the southern metro.
The Dayton metropolitan area also includes Kettering, Beavercreek, Centerville, Huber Heights, Fairborn, Miamisburg, Vandalia, Tipp City, and Wright-Patterson Air Force Base — all within 25 miles of downtown. Cross-city facilities appear in the Dayton Metro directory further down this page.
Sources and authority references
All statistics, legal citations, and provider details on this page trace to the primary sources below. Every link opens in a new tab and is not affiliated with RehabHive.
- ORC 2925.11 (Ohio Good Samaritan overdose immunity)
- Ohio House Bill 110, 131st General Assembly
- Montgomery County Community Overdose Action Team (COAT) reports
- Public Health Dayton-Montgomery County — recovery resources
- Ohio Department of Health — drug overdose
- Ohio Department of Medicaid
- Ohio Department of Mental Health & Addiction Services — Montgomery
- OARRS — Ohio Automated Rx Reporting System (Ohio Board of Pharmacy)
- OARRS patient portal
- Ohio Admin. Code 4731-11-11 (OARRS prescriber rule)
- Montgomery County ADAMHS Board
- Montgomery County direct settlement funding
- OneOhio Recovery Foundation — $808M settlement
- Ohio Attorney General — opioid settlement
- 988 Kentucky Lifeline (Ohio)
- CDC provisional drug overdose data
- CDC WONDER (Montgomery County FIPS 39113)
- SAMHSA National / findtreatment.gov
- HRSA health-center finder
Editorial review: This page is maintained by the RehabHive Editorial Team. Medical and legal claims were last reviewed on 2026-04-24. We do not provide medical advice. For clinical decisions, consult a licensed provider. For emergencies, call 911.
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Access OHIO
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Comprehensive outpatient center offering court-ordered treatment, group therapy, and services for adults and children with co-occurring disorders.
BrightView Health
Dayton, OH
Private outpatient center providing comprehensive addiction and mental health services with personalized treatment plans and 1:1 therapy sessions.
Children Have Options in Caring Environments Dayton
Dayton, OH
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CleanSlate Centers
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Community Medical Services Kettering
Dayton, OH
Private outpatient center offering comprehensive treatment for opioid use disorder, trauma counseling, and individualized care with medication-assisted therapy.
Dayton VA Medical Center Mental Health
Dayton, OH
Outpatient center providing comprehensive addiction treatment, mental health services, and trauma counseling for young adults and adults.
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National Youth Advocate Program Dayton
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South Community
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Wright Path Recovery Center
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Private outpatient center offering comprehensive addiction treatment, mental health services, trauma counseling, and personalized care for adults.
Dayton Metro — Kettering, Beavercreek, Centerville, Fairborn facilities
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Darke County Recovery Services Recovery and Wellness Center
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Comprehensive outpatient center offering integrated care for individuals with co-occurring mental health and substance use disorders.
Insurance accepted in Dayton
Most centers accept major plans under federal parity law. Tap a plan for coverage details, or verify your benefits free in under 5 minutes.
Nearby cities in Ohio
Browse SAMHSA-verified treatment centers in other Ohio communities.
Frequently Asked Questions
Will I get arrested if I call 911 for someone overdosing in Dayton?
Not for minor drug possession, if you complete a treatment screening within 30 days. Ohio's Good Samaritan statute at ORC 2925.11(B)(2)(b) gives both the person calling for help and the overdose victim immunity from arrest, charge, prosecution, or conviction for a minor-possession offense (misdemeanor or fifth-degree felony under ORC Chapter 2925) if the evidence was obtained because someone sought medical help. The immunity has two Ohio-specific conditions: within 30 days you must obtain a screening from a community addiction services provider (like Samaritan CrisisCare at 937-224-4646 or Nova Behavioral Health at 1-800-750-0750), and it is capped at two prior uses in your lifetime. It does not shield trafficking charges, warrants, probation/parole violations, or unrelated offenses. Stay with the person, call 911, administer naloxone if you have it, and begin rescue breathing.
Does Ohio Medicaid cover inpatient rehab in Dayton?
Ohio Medicaid covers the full ASAM continuum — outpatient (Level 1.0), intensive outpatient (2.1), partial hospitalization (2.5), residential (3.1 / 3.3 / 3.5), medically monitored inpatient (3.7), and medically managed inpatient (4.0) detox. Medications for opioid use disorder — buprenorphine, methadone, naltrexone — are all covered, and since a 2022 rule change by the Ohio Department of Medicaid, no prior authorization is required for MOUD initiation. In Montgomery County, Medicaid is delivered through six MCOs (Aetna Better Health, Anthem, Buckeye, CareSource, Humana Healthy Horizons, Molina, UnitedHealthcare Community Plan). Covered services are substantially identical across MCOs; differences are in provider networks. Before admission, confirm with the facility that it is in-network with your specific MCO.
Where can I get free naloxone in Dayton?
Three primary channels. First, Project DAWN at Samaritan CrisisCare, 601 Edwin C. Moses Blvd, Door F, runs a weekly Wednesday walk-up at noon — no ID, no appointment, no questions. Second, under Ohio's statewide pharmacy standing order, any pharmacist in Dayton can dispense naloxone without a patient-specific prescription. The Public Health Dayton-Montgomery County recovery page lists partner sites. Third, the Dayton Fire Department operates a leave-behind program and Montgomery County Jail distributes kits to people at release. If you need a kit now and cannot reach Door F, call the 24/7 ADAMHS line at 833-580-2255.
How much does rehab cost in Dayton if I do not have insurance?
Dayton's treatment system is built around the Montgomery County ADAMHS Board, which contracts with Nova Behavioral Health, Samaritan, Eastway, South Community, DeCoach, and Woodhaven to purchase treatment "slots" for uninsured residents using state and county levy dollars plus $3.86M in 2024 OneOhio settlement funds. Access pathway: call 833-580-2255 (24/7 Crisis Now Hotline), receive triage and screening, ADAMHS authorizes funding, placement happens. Walk-ins are also accepted at Samaritan CrisisCare, 601 Edwin C. Moses Blvd, regardless of ability to pay. Self-pay rates at commercial residential programs typically run $12,000–$28,000 for a 30-day inpatient stay, often lower than coastal markets. Many programs hold settlement-funded scholarship beds — ask the facility directly.
Can I get medication-assisted treatment (buprenorphine or methadone) the same day in Dayton?
Yes. Samaritan CrisisCare (937-224-4646) is the primary 24/7 walk-in; buprenorphine induction often happens during the first visit. BrightView Health (888-502-4571) explicitly markets same-day outpatient MAT. Nova Behavioral Health 24/7 admissions line (1-800-750-0750) and Mahajan Therapeutics (937-510-9008) both offer office-based Suboxone intake. For methadone, Dayton has several federally certified opioid treatment programs (OTPs) — federal law (42 CFR Part 8) restricts methadone dosing to OTPs, so general outpatient clinics cannot prescribe it. Since a 2022 Ohio Medicaid rule change, no prior authorization is required for MOUD initiation on any of the six Medicaid MCOs operating in Montgomery County.
Why did Dayton overdose deaths fall by so much?
The 2017–2025 decline (from a projected 800 deaths to 149 actual in 2025, a fourth consecutive annual drop) is the fastest reversal recorded by any US metro, per Public Health Dayton-Montgomery County. Researchers and local officials attribute it to three factors. First, naloxone saturation — 7,175 kits distributed in 2023, +45% YoY, through Project DAWN and partner channels. Second, the 2022 elimination of prior authorization for MOUD on Ohio Medicaid, which removed a 24–72 hour wait on buprenorphine initiation. Third, settlement-funded expansion — $3.86M to Region 9 projects in 2024 including Dayton Street Medicine for unhoused outreach and Dayton Children's for pediatric prevention. The story is told more fully in the Dayton Daily News coverage of the turnaround.
About Dayton Treatment Resources
Every facility listed on this page is sourced from SAMHSA’s National Treatment Locator and cross-referenced with Ohio state licensing data. Overdose trend statistics draw on CDC WONDER mortality records. Insurance coverage guidance follows the Mental Health Parity and Addiction Equity Act (DOL) and NIDA Principles of Effective Treatment.
Medical disclaimer: RehabHive provides informational content only. For a medical emergency, call 911. For free confidential guidance, call the SAMHSA National Helpline at 1-800-662-4357 (24/7, free). This listing does not imply endorsement of any specific provider.
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