The P.R.I.S.M. Center is a unique customer focused, results driven treatment center that promotes and encourages healthy lifestyles through behavior modification, education, intervention and preventative counseling


The ugly truth is...

Addiction to alcohol and drugs usually does not happen overnight. People who become addicted to drugs (such as alcohol, cocaine, heroin, marijuana, etc.) are gradually introduced and desensitized to them over a period of time. Initially use of drugs is recreational. Some people are able to keep using drugs on an occasional basis. Others are not so lucky. Alcohol and drugs usage begins (gradually in some cases, and abruptly in others) to increase, and the amount of attention they spend thinking about getting high, purchasing drugs, preparing drugs and taking drugs increases until it becomes the center of their lives. Responsibilities - work, friends and family, and community - fall by the wayside.

Counseling Services Available

P.R.I.S.M. Center
Staff Qualifications

  • Certified Alcohol and Drug Counselors through the Illinois Alcohol and Other Drug Abuse Professional Association, Inc. (IAODAPCA).
  • CPR and First Aid Certified
  • DUI Risk Education Instructor must be a Certified Addiction Counselor

Don't let this happen to you! Get help now!

1 drink = .54 oz of alchohol

Drinking and Driving is a Serious Offense

Is there anyone that does not know the dangers of drunk driving? We know about drunks causing wrecks. We know about alcohol related traffic accidents resulting in death, crippling injuries and property loss.

What we know less about is the drunk driver who receives extended jail and prison time for their actions. We know little about the lingering effect on the driver that kills because he or she chose to drive home from the bar after having "one too many." How does he or she cope with the guilt of killing or seriously injuring someone?

The killing of an innocent victim is by far the worst scenario when considering the dangers of drunk driving. Driving while intoxicated is a continuing problem in the United States and is prompting states to enact more restrictions and increasingly harsh penalties for drivers whose Blood Alcohol Concentration (BAC) is .08 and above.