Karen's Place – Louisville

Substance Abuse · Kentucky · Paid

Women's residential substance abuse treatment program serving the Louisville area with structured housing, counseling, and peer support. While primarily serving women, fathers with partners or family members in need of care can call to learn about admission, family services, and referrals for men's programming. Insurance and private pay arrangements apply. Contact the program directly for intake details, expected length of stay, and required documentation.

Contact & Details

Address: Louisville, KY 40218

Phone: 502-968-9551

Hours: 24/7 residential

About Substance Abuse for Fathers

Substance abuse treatment in the US is delivered through state-licensed treatment providers, nonprofit recovery programs (AA, NA, SMART Recovery), hospital-based detox, methadone clinics, and sober living houses. SAMHSA's National Helpline (1-800-662-HELP) provides free, confidential referrals to local treatment 24/7. Most states fund a network of publicly-supported treatment centers that accept uninsured and Medicaid clients; the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration maintains a national treatment locator at findtreatment.gov. Fathers dealing with substance issues during custody disputes often need documented treatment compliance — court-ordered programs exist for this specific purpose. Recovery support includes peer recovery specialists, medication-assisted treatment (MAT), and drug courts. This directory pulls together the state's single state agency for SUD, treatment finders, mutual aid meetings, and MAT providers.

Substance Abuse in Kentucky

Kentucky family courts hear custody, visitation, and child support cases in most counties; the remaining counties use district or circuit court. The Cabinet for Health and Family Services Division of Child Support administers enforcement. Louisville, Lexington, Bowling Green, and Covington are the major metros. Legal Aid Society (Louisville/western), Kentucky Legal Aid, and Appalachian Research and Defense Fund (AppalReD) cover the state.

More Substance Abuse in Kentucky

  • Kentucky Division of Behavioral Health — State agency responsible for substance abuse prevention, treatment, and recovery services across Kentucky. Fathers can use the Division's we
  • Centerstone – Substance Abuse Treatment — Outpatient and residential addiction treatment, counseling, and recovery services in the Louisville area. Fathers can access individual ther
  • The Healing Place – Louisville — Long-term, peer-driven recovery program for men and women struggling with addiction in Louisville. Offers emergency shelter, detox support,
  • Bluegrass.org – Substance Abuse — Regional behavioral health and addiction provider serving central Kentucky with outpatient treatment, residential care, and 24/7 crisis resp
  • SAMHSA Helpline – Kentucky — Free, confidential 24/7 referral service from the federal Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration, connecting callers to l
  • Voices of Hope – Lexington — Peer-based recovery support organization offering community recovery services, peer coaching, and drop-in recovery meetings in Lexington. Fa

Substance Abuse — Common Questions

I need help but have no insurance — where do I start?
Call SAMHSA's National Helpline at 1-800-662-HELP (free, 24/7). They'll connect you to state-funded treatment providers that accept uninsured clients. Every state has a Single State Agency for Substance Use that funds community treatment on sliding-scale fees.
What's MAT (Medication-Assisted Treatment)?
MAT combines medications (methadone, buprenorphine/Suboxone, naltrexone/Vivitrol) with counseling to treat opioid and alcohol use disorders. It's evidence-based, reduces overdose risk substantially, and is covered by Medicaid and most private insurance. Find providers at findtreatment.gov.
Will going to rehab hurt my custody case?
Voluntarily seeking treatment is almost always viewed favorably by courts — it shows responsibility and commitment to sobriety. Coordinate with your attorney so treatment documentation supports your case. Court-ordered programs through drug courts specifically protect custody rights.
How long is treatment?
Detox: 3–7 days. Residential rehab: 30–90 days typically. Intensive outpatient: 8–12 weeks, 9–15 hours per week. Standard outpatient: months to years. Aftercare and peer support (AA, NA, SMART Recovery) is ongoing and free.