Elite Treatment Center
About Elite Treatment Center
Elite Treatment Center is an addiction treatment provider in Chicago Heights, Illinois offering outpatient services and sober living residences for adults seeking recovery.
Since 2008 the center has specialized in opioid use disorder treatment with medication assisted treatment, intensive outpatient programs and structured recovery housing.
Do they take insurance or self pay?
The center accepts Medicare, Medicaid, military insurance, private health insurance and state financed plans along with cash or self payment and sliding fee scale options.
What treatment do they offer?
Elite Treatment Center provides outpatient treatment and intensive outpatient services, including methadone maintenance treatment and medication assisted treatment with methadone, buprenorphine with naloxone and naltrexone.
Programs include individual counseling, group counseling, family and couples counseling along with clinical evaluations and modified treatment plans tailored to each person’s needs.
Who can get help?
The center serves adults and young adults struggling with substance use disorders, with a specialty in opioid addictions including heroin, fentanyl and prescription painkillers.
Elite Treatment Center also works with DUI or DWI clients and provides services for both men and women.
| Levels of Care | Detox Service Setting | Programs | Payment Options | |||
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In outpatient therapy, you’ll attend therapy sessions several times each week while living at home. This is ideal if you have a strong support system and a lower risk of relapse. Outpatient treatment offers flexibility to maintain work, school or family obligations. |
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Outpatient detox gives you access to medically supervised withdrawal services while still allowing you to live at home. You’ll attend a clinic for treatment and monitoring. This flexible option is suitable for those with mild to moderate withdrawal symptoms who have strong support systems. |
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Adult programs address the substance use and life challenges specific to adults. Therapists can deliver sessions in individual, group and family settings. Services often include job support and life skills training in a structured environment. |
Alcohol detox programs offer medical support to help individuals withdraw safely from alcohol. Your care team may use medications to ease your symptoms and provide medical monitoring to address complications. |
Drug detox programs support individuals who are withdrawing from addictive substances like cocaine and heroin. Medical support helps you manage symptoms in a controlled and safe environment so you can achieve initial sobriety. |
Men's programs address substance use while also considering the social pressures, family roles and mental health concerns that are specific to men. You’ll learn healthy coping mechanisms as you build emotional resilience and develop communication skills. |
Opioid detox uses medications to ease severe withdrawal symptoms. It also includes medical supervision to help you manage potential complications. These services allow you to stabilize and begin a recovery plan. |
Women's programs offer a safe and supportive space to focus on gender specific issues such as trauma, family roles and mental health conditions. Therapists tailor the sessions to address women's needs and foster empowerment in a healing and nurturing environment. |
Young adult programs are designed for individuals who are transitioning into adulthood. Topics of discussion typically include identity, independence and peer relationships. Providers may also offer life skills training and career support. |
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Payment Assistance
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Medicaid
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Private Insurance
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Self Pay
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Levels of Care
In outpatient therapy, you’ll attend therapy sessions several times each week while living at home. This is ideal if you have a strong support system and a lower risk of relapse. Outpatient treatment offers flexibility to maintain work, school or family obligations.
Detox Service Setting
Outpatient detox gives you access to medically supervised withdrawal services while still allowing you to live at home. You’ll attend a clinic for treatment and monitoring. This flexible option is suitable for those with mild to moderate withdrawal symptoms who have strong support systems.
Programs
Adult programs address the substance use and life challenges specific to adults. Therapists can deliver sessions in individual, group and family settings. Services often include job support and life skills training in a structured environment.
Alcohol detox programs offer medical support to help individuals withdraw safely from alcohol. Your care team may use medications to ease your symptoms and provide medical monitoring to address complications.
Drug detox programs support individuals who are withdrawing from addictive substances like cocaine and heroin. Medical support helps you manage symptoms in a controlled and safe environment so you can achieve initial sobriety.
Men's programs address substance use while also considering the social pressures, family roles and mental health concerns that are specific to men. You’ll learn healthy coping mechanisms as you build emotional resilience and develop communication skills.
Opioid detox uses medications to ease severe withdrawal symptoms. It also includes medical supervision to help you manage potential complications. These services allow you to stabilize and begin a recovery plan.
Women's programs offer a safe and supportive space to focus on gender specific issues such as trauma, family roles and mental health conditions. Therapists tailor the sessions to address women's needs and foster empowerment in a healing and nurturing environment.
Young adult programs are designed for individuals who are transitioning into adulthood. Topics of discussion typically include identity, independence and peer relationships. Providers may also offer life skills training and career support.
Contact

Amy Greene is an award-winning novelist and essayist. Her acclaimed debut novel, Bloodroot, was a New York Times national best seller. Her second novel, Long Man, was named a Best Book of the Year by The Washington Post in 2014. Her essays have appeared in publications such as The New York Times and Glamor Magazine. She currently resides in her native East Tennessee, amid the mountains she loves. In both her fiction and her nonfiction writing, Amy is dedicated exploring complex issues of mental health and spiritual and emotional wellbeing.