Psychiatric And/or Chemical Dependency Hospitals
Hospital Name | City | County | Hospital Beds |
Year Founded |
Notes | Website |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Anchor Hospital | Atlanta | Clayton | 111 | website | ||
Coastal Behavioral Health | Savannah | Chatham | 50 | website | ||
Coastal Harbor Treatment Center | Savannah | Chatham | 132 | website | ||
Coliseum Center for Behavioral Health | Macon | Bibb | website | |||
Crescent Pines Hospital | Stockbridge | Henry | 50 | website | ||
Hillside Hospital | Atlanta | Fulton | website | |||
Laurel Heights Hospital | Atlanta | Fulton | website | |||
Macon Behavioral Health System | Macon | Bibb | website | |||
Peachford Hospital | Atlanta | Dekalb | 246 | 1973 | website | |
Ridgeview Institute | Smyrna | Cobb | website | |||
RiverWoods Behavioral Health System | Riverdale | Clayton | 75 | website | ||
Saint Simons By-The-Sea | Saint Simons Island | Glynn | website | |||
SummitRidge Hospital | Lawrenceville | Gwinnett | website | |||
Talbott Recovery Atlanta | Atlanta | Clayton | website | |||
Talbott Recovery Columbus | Columbus | Muscogee | website | |||
Talbott Recovery Dunwoody | Dunwoody | DeKalb | website | |||
Willingway Hospital | Statesboro | Bulloch | website | |||
Willowbrooke at Tanner | Villa Rica | Carroll | website | |||
Youth Villages Inner Harbour Campus | Douglasville | Douglas | website |
Read more about this topic: List Of Hospitals In Georgia (U.S. State)
Famous quotes containing the words psychiatric, chemical, dependency and/or hospitals:
“Indeed the involuntary character of psychiatric treatment is at odds with the spirit and ethics of medicine itself.”
—Kate Millett (b. 1934)
“We are close to dead. There are faces and bodies like gorged maggots on the dance floor, on the highway, in the city, in the stadium; they are a host of chemical machines who swallow the product of chemical factories, aspirin, preservatives, stimulant, relaxant, and breathe out their chemical wastes into a polluted air. The sense of a long last night over civilization is back again.”
—Norman Mailer (b. 1923)
“The history of work has been, in part, the history of the workers body. Production depended on what the body could accomplish with strength and skill. Techniques that improve output have been driven by a general desire to decrease the pain of labor as well as by employers intentions to escape dependency upon that knowledge which only the sentient laboring body could provide.”
—Shoshana Zuboff (b. 1951)
“Our panaceas cure but few ails, our general hospitals are private and exclusive. We must set up another Hygeia than is now worshiped. Do not the quacks even direct small doses for children, larger for adults, and larger still for oxen and horses? Let us remember that we are to prescribe for the globe itself.”
—Henry David Thoreau (18171862)