If you are looking for drug treatment or alcohol addiction help in New Hampshire we can help. Call us today and we will help you find the treatment solution that is right for you. We offer family care and individual treatment strategies for New Hampshire residents.
Whether you are looking for help with, drug abuse, alcohol abuse, dual diagnosis or any other behavioral addiction in New Hampshire we can help. You don’t need to scour the internet for a specific treatment center, as a matter of fact most of the most helpful treatment centers in New Hampshire don’t even have a website. We can help connect you with a facility in your area. Best of all, this service is free to you.
How we can help with addiction
Our mission is to get you the addiction help you need quickly. When you call we will give you a case manager who will be with you throughout the course of your treatment. This is very helpful as the case manager acts as a liaison between you, your treatment provider and your insurance company. We work with our treatment partners all over the country and we find you a treatment center that will work for your unique situation. We take your treatment needs, ability to pay, and location and come up with a solution that works for you. Best of all, you don’t need to pay us a thing for this service.
New Hampshire Drug Abuse and Treatment Facts
In New Hampshire in March 2004 %91 of people in treatment were in outpatient treatment, %8 were in residential treatment and %1 were in a hospital based program. %72 of New Hampshire Treatment facilities accept Private health insurance and %62 accept Medicaid. In addition %73 provide services to those without the ability to pay.
(source: http://wwwdasis.samhsa.gov/webt/state_data/NH04.pdf)
Drug Situation: Retail quantities of cocaine and crack cocaine remain readily available in the state of New Hampshire. Dominican narcotics traffickers are the principal distributors of cocaine in the state. Heroin is available in street level quantities in New Hampshire, supplied primarily by Dominican traffickers with bases of operation in the Lowell/Lawrence, MA areas. Marijuana is readily available throughout the state, and it is apparent that marijuana is the predominate drug of choice in the state. The state of New Hampshire has experienced a continued growth in availability of methamphetamine within the state in the past few years, particularly in and around the seacoast area. It is anticipated that this trend will continue.
Cocaine: Cocaine HCl and crack cocaine are readily available at the retail level; kilogram quantities of the drug are encountered with less frequency. In recent years, the seacoast region has experienced a significant increase in availability, due in part to its proximity to source areas in Massachusetts, specifically, the Lowell and Lawrence areas. Dominican narcotics traffickers dominate the distribution of cocaine HCl in the state and are supplied by associates in New York and Lowell/Lawrence, MA; however cocaine is brought into the region from Florida and the Mexican border. Cocaine and crack cocaine availability and prices have remained constant.
Heroin: Heroin remains readily available at the retail level and its use is widespread. Heroin sources of supply are located in Lowell, Lawrence and Lynn, MA. The drug’s ultimate source center is New York. Dominican traffickers are the primary distributors of high quality heroin in New Hampshire. The state continues to experience increases in heroin availability, particularly along the seacoast, southeast region and western part of the state. The state (as well as source areas of Lowell and Lawrence) has seen a decrease in heroin purity levels . Heroin prices on the retail level have remained stable.
Methamphetamine: The state of New Hampshire has experienced a continued growth in availability of methamphetamine in the past few years, particularly in and around the seacoast area. Methamphetamine is available throughout the state. The availability of “ice” has increased. Methamphetamine, which is produced in Mexico, is primarily transported into the state via express mail packages, by common carrier and by privately owned vehicles from the West Coast of the United States. Methamphetamine prices have remained stable. Statewide there has been a significant increase in the number of methamphetamine laboratory seizures in 2005. Methamphetamine Legislation: In May, 2005, a bipartisan legislative caucus was formed in New Hampshire to study the state’s emerging methamphetamine problem. As a result of this caucus, several bills were introduced by legislators when the 2006 session convened in January (i.e. HB 1406, 1576, 1578, 1713, 1667, 1731-FN, 1745)
Club Drugs: MDMA is widely available and is frequently sold to teenagers and young adults at nightclubs, rave parties and on college campuses. MDMA in powder form has also been encountered in the state. The majority of the MDMA available in the seacoast region originates in New York, NY and is transported into the region via private vehicle for distribution. Canada has also served as a transshipment point for MDMA destined for New Hampshire.
Marijuana: Marijuana is readily available throughout New Hampshire. Marijuana is the predominant drug of choice in the state. Most of the marijuana available in the region is transported from the southwestern U.S. and originates in Mexico with local Caucasian violators traveling weekly or bi-monthly to Arizona and southern California to obtain 200-300 pound quantities of the drug. The marijuana is usually transported into the state via land vehicle. Marijuana is also being shipped in relatively small quantities (20-50 lb. packages) into the state utilizing U. S. and other mail services.
Cannabis is also cultivated within New Hampshire, though not as readily in recent years. Because of the rural nature of the state, particularly in the north, potential growing areas abound and most of the outdoor growers have reduced the size of their plots and increased the variety and scope of their concealment efforts. THC content in excess of 22 percent has been seen in the state.
High grade hydroponic marijuana from Canada is increasingly available in New Hampshire and is smuggled into the state transiting through its shared border with Canada. A variety of smuggling methods have been encountered including concealment in couriers’ backpacks and hockey-type travel bags, helicopter air drops wherein the marijuana wrapped in plastic bags is dropped to individuals waiting on land, and the use of snowmobiles during the winter months.This high potency Canadian grown marijuana’s THC content can range from 15 percent to as much as 25 percent.
Marijuana Legislation: In March 2001, The New Hampshire House of Representatives, by a vote of 223 to 101, rejected a bill that would have legalized marijuana for medical purposes.
Other Drugs: Much of the diversion problem in the state of New Hampshire involves fraudulent prescriptions, dated & duped doctors, mail order pharmaceuticals, illegal and over dispensing, doctor shopping, chemically impaired practitioners, etc. OxyContin® continues to be a pharmaceutical drug of abuse in the state.
Pharmaceutical Diversion: The diversion and abuse of methadone is an emerging problem in New Hampshire. Methods of diversion include illegal sale and distribution by health care professionals and workers, and “doctor shopping” (going to a number of doctors to obtain prescriptions for a controlled pharmaceutical).
DEA Mobile Enforcement Teams: This cooperative program with state and local law enforcement counterparts was conceived in 1995 in response to the overwhelming problem of drug-related violent crime in towns and cities across the nation. Since the inception of the MET Program, 473 deployments have been completed nationwide, resulting in 19,643 arrests. Since the inception of the program, there has been one MET deployment in the State of New Hampshire, in Hampton.
DEA Regional Enforcement Teams: This program was designed to augment existing DEA division resources by targeting drug organizations operating in the United States where there is a lack of sufficient local drug law enforcement. This program was conceived in 1999 in response to the threat posed by drug trafficking organizations that have established networks of cells to conduct drug trafficking operations in smaller, non-traditional trafficking locations in the United States. As of January 31, 2005, there have been 27 deployments nationwide, and one deployment in the U.S. Virgin Islands, resulting in 671 arrests. There have been no RET deployments in the state of New Hampshire.
Information reproduced from the public domain at http://www.usdoj.gov/dea/pubs/states/ Newhampshire.html
Acworth | Albany | Alexandria | Allenstown | Alstead | Alton | Amherst | Andover | Antrim | Ashland | Atkinson | Auburn
Barnstead | Barrington | Bartlett | Bath | Bedford | Belmont | Bennington | Benton | Berlin | Bethlehem | Boscawen | Bow | Bradford | Brentwood | Bridgewater | Bristol | Brookfield | Brookline
Campton | Canaan | Candia | Canterbury | Carroll | Center Harbor | Charlestown | Chatham | Chester | Chesterfield | Chichester | Claremont | Clarksville | Colebrook | Columbia | Concord | Conway | Cornish | Croydon
Dalton | Danbury | Danville | Deerfield | Deering | Derry | Dixville | Dorchester | Dover | Dublin | Dummer | Dunbarton | Durham
East Kingston | Easton | Eaton | Effingham | Ellsworth | Enfield | Epping | Epsom | Errol | Exeter
Farmington | Fitzwilliam | Francestown | Franconia | Franklin | Freedom | Fremont
Gilford | Gilmanton | Gilsum | Goffstown | Gorham | Goshen | Grafton | Grantham | Greenfield | Greenland | Greenville | Groton
Hampstead | Hampton | Hampton Falls | Hancock | Hanover | Harrisville | Hart’s Location | Haverhill | Hebron | Henniker | Hill | Hillsborough | Hinsdale | Holderness | Hollis | Hooksett | Hopkinton | Hudson
Jackson | Jaffrey | Jefferson
Keene | Kensington | Kingston
Laconia | Lancaster | Landaff | Langdon | Lebanon | Lee | Lempster | Lincoln | Lisbon | Litchfield | Littleton | Londonderry | Loudon | Lyman | Lyme | Lyndeborough
Madbury | Madison | Manchester | Marlborough | Marlow | Mason | Meredith | Merrimack | Middleton | Milan | Milford | Milton | Monroe | Mont Vernon | Moultonborough
Nashua | Nelson | New Boston | Newbury | New Castle | New Durham | Newfields | New Hampton | Newington | New Ipswich | New London | Newmarket | Newport | Newton | Northfield | North Hampton | Northumberland | Northwood | Nottingham
Orange | Orford | Ossipee
Pelham | Pembroke | Peterborough | Piermont | Pittsburg | Pittsfield | Plainfield | Plaistow | Plymouth | Portsmouth
Randolph | Raymond | Richmond | Rindge | Rochester | Rollinsford | Roxbury | Rumney | Rye
Salem | Salisbury | Sanbornton | Sandown | Sandwich | Seabrook | Sharon | Shelburne | Somersworth | South Hampton | Springfield | Stark | Stewartstown | Stoddard | Strafford | Stratford | Stratham | Sugar Hill | Sullivan | Sunapee | Surry | Sutton | Swanzey
Tamworth | Temple | Thornton | Tilton | Troy | Tuftonboro
Unity
Wakefield | Walpole | Warner | Warren | Washington | Waterville Valley | Weare | Webster | Wentworth | Westmoreland | Whitefield | Wilmot | Wilton | Winchester | Windham | Windsor | Wolfeboro | Woodstock
Atkinson and Gilmanton Academy Grant | Bean’s Grant | Bean’s Purchase | Cambridge | Chandler’s Purchase | Crawford’s Purchase | Cutt’s Grant | Dix’s Grant | Erving’s Location | Green’s Grant | Hadley’s Purchase | Hale’s Location | Kilkenny | Livermore | Low and Burbank’s Grant | Martin’s Location | Millsfield | Odell | Pinkham’s Grant | Sargent’s Purchase | Second College Grant | Success | Thompson and Meserve’s Purchase | Wentworth’s Location
