Jerrod Menz NEWS RELEASE
(800) 757-9867
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA DRUG REHAB CENTER OFFERS FREE OUTPATIENT TREATMENT SERVICES TO MILITARY VETERANS WHO HAVE RECENTLY RETURNED FROM ACTIVE DUTY
A Better Tomorrow Treatment Center Inc. is also offering a 50 percent discount to veterans seeking residential treatment
MURRIETA, Calif., Feb. 20, 2009 ― A Southern California drug and alcohol rehab center is offering free outpatient treatment services to military veterans who have returned from active duty during the past five years.
A Better Tomorrow Treatment Center Inc. is also offering veterans a 50
percent discount on its 28-day, residential treatment programs.
“We continue to see news reports about veterans returning from active duty overseas who are suffering from Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder. And given the strong correlation between PTSD and drug or alcohol addiction, we think our services would be of significant value to veterans who need help,” said Jerrod Menz, A Better Tomorrow’s president.
A Better Tomorrow will provide free outpatient treatment services three days a week for up to five veterans at a time with a maximum of one month of treatment services per veteran, Menz said.
Veterans who have recently returned from active duty and need residential treatment will be eligible for a 50 percent discount on A Better Tomorrow’s residential programs, which normally cost just over $13,000 per month, Menz said. The discounts will be offered to veterans on an ongoing basis as space permits.
Based in Murrieta, Calif., A Better Tomorrow has the highest level of accreditation that can be obtained by a drug or alcohol treatment center. The clinic is accredited by the Commission on Accreditation of Rehabilitation Facilities (CARF), placing it in the top 5 percent of drug and alcohol treatment clinics in California. For more information about A Better Tomorrow, please contact Jerrod Menz at (800) 757-9867. Additional information is available on the clinic’s website at http://www.abttc.com/.
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I'm really glad that free outpatient services are offered to our vets. That may be the one group I can understand how it happens with. I know war is an awful thing. To be subjected daily to violence and death has to overwelm even the the hardest heart. To see what war does to civilians, especially the children, has got to eat at their soul. I'm glad you see the need and are doing something positive to help them.
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