Skip to content

Options that fit your needs and accept your insurance.

  • Real-time help available 24/7.
  • Instantly check rehab coverage.
  • Personalized admissions guidance.
(888) 674-0062

Confidential Admissions Guidance

Get Help Now

Presbyterian Hospitality House

Presbyterian Hospitality House

Drug Rehab Center in Fairbanks, Alaska

  • Mental Health
  • Eating Disorder
  • Dual Diagnosis

Presbyterian Hospitality House in Fairbanks, Alaska is a residential substance abuse treatment center offering a comprehensive and holistic approach to addiction treatment for individuals and their families, with services that focus on healthy coping skills, understanding addiction, and relapse prevention, as well as individual and family counseling, aimed at facilitating healing and reconciliation in a safe and trusting environment.

About This Alaska Facility

Presbyterian Hospitality House in Fairbanks, Alaska is a residential substance abuse treatment center. Their facility offers a comprehensive and holistic approach to addiction treatment for individuals and their families. Their individualized program consists of group therapy, individual therapy, psycho-educational groups, community meetings, spiritual growth, and recreational activities. The goal of the program is to help clients gain sobriety and create a safe and healthy environment in which to heal and grow.

At Presbyterian Hospitality House, clients can take advantage of a variety of services designed to help them succeed in sobriety. These services include a structured program that focuses on providing information about healthy coping skills, understanding addiction and relapse prevention, and developing positive thinking and habits. Clients can take part in individual counseling to gain insight and greater understanding of the triggers and underlying causes of their addiction. Additionally, clients can participate in family support services, which includes counseling, to promote healing and reconciliation amongst family members in a safe and trusting environment.

Presbyterian Hospitality House is an accredited treatment facility, recently receiving accreditation from the Commission on Accreditation of Rehabilitation Facilities (CARF). They are also licensed by the state of Alaska to provide substance abuse treatment services. Furthermore, they work in collaboration with other qualifying treatment facilities to ensure clients have access to all the resources they need to transition back into the community, and have been given awards from the North Star Foundation for their commitment to individuals and families in their recovery process.

Genders
  • Male
  • Female
  • Gender Exclusive Center
  • Ages
  • Children
  • Teenagers
  • Adults
  • Seniors (65+)
  • Modality
  • Individuals
  • Couples
  • Family
  • Groups
  • Additional
  • LGBTQ+ Allied
  • Hearing Impaired
  • Veteran Specific
  • LGBTQ+ Allied
  • Conditions and Issues Treated

    When addiction and psychiatric issues co-occur, the addict’s recovery is more successful when both conditions are treated. A dual diagnosis refers to a condition in which the patient is diagnosed with two health issues: addiction and bipolar disorder. The most common therapies are psychotherapy, behavioral therapy, spiritual counseling, 12-step programs, and medication management.

    Levels of Care Offered at Presbyterian Hospitality House

    This center offers a variety of custom treatment tailored to individual recovery. Currently available are Dual-Diagnosis, Inpatient, Outpatient, with additional therapies available as listed below.

    Inpatient treatment centers offer a safe, secure, and often medically supervised environment for drug or alcohol-addicted individuals. Many of these facilities are equipped to provide detoxification, treatment for co-occurring mental health disorders, and aftercare programs. The patient typically spends 28 to 30 days at the facility and will receive extensive drug counseling.

    An outpatient treatment program is set up to help with alcohol or drug addiction or a co-occurring disorder. The patient must attend the facility for their therapy and other programs but can return home each night.

    The frequency of mandatory attendance decreases after much of Presbyterian Hospitality House‘s program is complete.
    Outpatient treatment is a recovery approach that allows recovering addicts to live at home while getting rehab for addiction

    An outpatient can include day treatments which include attending group sessions one hour per week. A person living in an outpatient environment may be allowed the opportunity to work full time if they choose to and continue studies without interruption from drugs/alcohol.

    Outpatient treatment is an option for people who want to maintain their careers and families. Outpatients live at home but attend treatment such as individual counseling, group counseling, or twelve-step meetings during the day.

    Therapies & Programs

    At Presbyterian Hospitality House , to learn from past mistakes and improve one’s situation, the recovering person meets individually with a therapist. The counselor or therapist will address addiction causes, triggers, mental issues, dual diagnosis, and aftercare plans during this time. This is a very intense and challenging process. Some clients find it easier to open up to someone other than family or friends who understand their struggles with addiction.

    Couples therapy sessions are typically used to help couples in recovery from drug addiction work through their issues. These types of sessions can be beneficial for many reasons, including the fact that they add a layer of accountability when both partners in a couple are recovering from addiction.

    Therapy can also provide addicts with another effective way to cope with stress and avoid relapse during difficult situations. This type of therapy can help improve communication with their partners, which can strengthen the relationship and prevent future problems that might lead to relapse.

    Family therapy is a crucial part of drug treatment and getting sober. It is one of the most effective ways to help addicts stay on the path to long-term sobriety. An addict’s family can play a vital part in helping them to avoid relapse. They can spot the warning signs and help them get back on track.

    In group therapy, recovering addicts meet with a therapist and other people in recovery. Some groups are closed, meaning only people who share the same addiction or problem can attend. Others are open to anyone who wants to stop using drugs or drinking alcohol. Group therapy sessions typically focus on one topic each week or month so that recovering addicts can discuss issues they face daily.

    Trauma therapy allows people to face and learn from past traumas.

    Many people suffer childhood traumas that lead to adult addiction. During treatment at Presbyterian Hospitality House [/type], you can move forward in your recovery and reclaim your sober future! Trauma is a common cause of psychological disorders like Addiction Disorder. It’s common in Addictive Disorders patients because traumatized people have strong emotions or thoughts that lead to addictive behaviors.

    Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT) is a type of therapy created in the late 1980s and early 1990s. It was designed to help people with high rates of suicidal behavior.

    The goal of DBT is to teach mindfulness, distress tolerance, emotion regulation, and interpersonal effectiveness to help people learn how to live a life that is no longer controlled by overwhelming emotions and urges.

    DBT is beneficial in treating drug addiction because it helps patients understand and cope with their cravings for drugs or alcohol rather than turning to those substances as a way of coping.

    Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) is based on the idea that how we feel, think and act all interact together. It helps people explore their thoughts for problems (or false beliefs) that influence their mood and actions. CBT is very goal-oriented, which means that the therapist and patient work together on a specific problem. In addition to helping a client focus on thoughts that can be changed, CBT also allows them to take an active role in their treatment. Our thoughts determine our feelings and behaviors; our feelings affect our thoughts, and our behaviors change our thoughts and feelings.

    Patient Experience

    Experiential Therapy at Presbyterian Hospitality House

    Experiential Therapy is a different way of thinking about addiction treatment. It uses physical activities to help work through troubling emotions, memories, and trauma that are sources of psychological issues like addiction.

    Experiential Therapy can be an effective option for those who have struggled with past traumas or challenges associated with life decisions such as drug use. The non-traditional approach helps people deal more effectively with these struggles. It also allows them to gain new perspectives on their behavior patterns by recreating experiences in healthy ways rather than continuing old habits that may no longer serve them.

    Payment Options Accepted

    For specific insurance or payment methods please contact us.
  • Health Insurance
  • Self-Pay / Cash
  • Medicare
  • Medicaid
  • Military Insurance
  • IHS/Tribunal/Urban
  • State-Financed
  • Sliding Scale
  • Is your insurance accepted?
    Ask an expert, call (888) 674-0062

    Additional Details

    Specifics, location, and helpful extra information.
    Presbyterian Hospitality House Location and Directions
    Address Information209 Forty Mile Avenue
    Fairbanks, Alaska 99701 Phone Number(907) 456-6445 Meta DetailsUpdated November 25, 2023
    Staff Verified

    Patient Reviews

    There are no reviews yet. Be the first one to write one.

    Fairbanks, Alaska Addiction Information

    Alaska is enduring a multi-faceted drug and alcohol abuse problem. Heroin-related overdoses are 50% higher in Alaska than in the rest of the United States. Methamphetamine use is a major contributing factor to violent crime in Alaska. More than 60,000 Alaskans need some sort of treatment for substance abuse and/or addiction.

    The drug addiction problem in Fairbanks, AK is relatively bad. In 2016, there were 153 drug overdose deaths in Fairbanks, Alaska. Alcohol is the most commonly abused substance with 37% of residents reporting drinking. 8% of Fairbanks residents reported using illicit drugs. If you or someone you love is struggling with addiction, there is help available. Treatment options include individual and group counseling, 12-step programs, medication-assisted treatment, and inpatient and outpatient programs.

    Treatment in Nearby Cities
    Centers near Presbyterian Hospitality House
    Fairbanks Native Association - Youth & Young Adult Services
    615 Bidwell Avenue, Fairbanks, AK, 99701
    Fresh Start
    3504 Industrial Avenue, Fairbanks, AK, 99701


    The facility name, logo and brand are the property and registered trademarks of Presbyterian Hospitality House, and are being used for identification and informational purposes only. Use of these names, logos and brands shall not imply endorsement. RehabNow.org is not affiliated with or sponsored by Presbyterian Hospitality House.