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Facility profile · Tucson, AZ

Artemis Adolescent Arizona: Facility Profile

Review Artemis Adolescent Healing Center in Tucson, including teen mental health and substance use programs, family questions and insurance.

FAR guidance line: 877-959-7271 · Calling does not guarantee admission or coverage.

LocationTucson, AZ
Levels of careResidential, PHP, IOP and outpatient
Who it servesAdolescents; confirm current age range
InsuranceCommercial plans; guardian should verify benefits
Important disclosure: Find Addiction Rehabs is a separate treatment-information and referral resource; it does not operate Artemis Adolescent Healing Center. FAR may have a commercial relationship with facilities it lists and may receive compensation following a referral. The FAR telephone number on this page does not connect directly to the facility.

Artemis Adolescent Healing Center is a Tucson, Arizona program focused on teenagers with mental health, substance use and co-occurring concerns. Families should verify the current program, consent requirements and safety capabilities before admission.

Facility information checked July 12, 2026: Artemis’ official site identifies 6599 N Oracle Road, Suite B, in Tucson. Because this facility serves minors, guardians should obtain clear information about licensing, communication, education and emergency procedures.

Artemis Adolescent Healing Center Overview

Artemis describes age-specific behavioral health and substance use services for teenagers. Adolescent treatment differs from adult treatment in important ways, including guardian consent, family involvement, education, developmentally appropriate programming and coordination with pediatric or psychiatric providers.

The official website presents programs for families in Arizona and for those considering travel. A guardian should confirm the admitted age range, custody and consent documents, school coordination and travel arrangements before making plans.

Care Options Reported by Artemis

The facility website describes residential treatment, partial hospitalization, intensive outpatient and standard outpatient programs. It also lists family therapy and services addressing both mental health and substance use. Not every adolescent will need or qualify for every level.

An assessment should consider immediate safety, suicidality or self-harm, withdrawal risk, eating or medical concerns, psychiatric symptoms and the family environment. Call 911 for an immediate emergency or call/text 988 for crisis support in the United States.

Conditions and Treatment Focus

Artemis publishes information about depression, anxiety, trauma-related conditions, ADHD, bipolar disorder, eating disorders, personality-related symptoms and substance use. A website list does not establish that a program can treat every severity or combination of conditions.

Ask which clinicians evaluate adolescents, whether psychiatric and medical services are on site, how medications are handled and which situations require hospital-based or specialized care.

Family, Education and Communication

Family involvement can be particularly important in adolescent care. Guardians should ask how often family sessions occur, how progress is communicated, what confidentiality rules apply and how the program coordinates with schools or educational services.

Insurance and Costs

The official site publishes information about commercial insurance plans. Confirm coverage for the exact location and level of care, along with prior authorization, expected duration and services billed separately. A benefits check is not a promise of admission or payment.

Accreditation and Licensing Questions

Artemis describes Joint Commission accreditation and Arizona licensing. Guardians should verify which legal entity, program and address appear on each credential and ask how background checks, staffing ratios and adolescent safety requirements are handled.

Questions for Families to Ask

  • What ages and clinical needs does the program currently accept?
  • What guardian consent or custody documentation is required?
  • How are suicide risk, self-harm and medical emergencies handled?
  • What family therapy and parent communication are included?
  • How does the program support education?
  • What is the policy for medications, phones and visits?
  • How is transition back to home, school and outpatient care planned?
Call Find Addiction Rehabs: 877-959-7271. This number reaches FAR, not Artemis directly. FAR may receive compensation following a referral. For immediate danger call 911; for crisis support call or text 988.


Frequently Asked Questions About Artemis Adolescent

Where is Artemis Adolescent Healing Center?

The official contact page lists 6599 N Oracle Road, Suite B, in Tucson, Arizona. Confirm the program address before arrival.

Does Artemis treat teenagers?

Yes, the facility describes adolescent-focused mental health and substance use services. Families should confirm the current age range and admission criteria.

Does Artemis offer residential and outpatient care?

The official site describes residential, partial hospitalization, intensive outpatient and outpatient programs. Current availability must be confirmed.

How are families involved at Artemis?

The facility describes family therapy, but frequency and participation vary. Guardians should ask how sessions, updates, consent and discharge planning work.

Is 877-959-7271 Artemis’ direct admissions number?

No. It is the Find Addiction Rehabs line. Use the official facility website when you want to contact Artemis directly.

Written By

Contributor

  • brandon crawford avatar 160

    Brandon Crawford is a content writer and behavioral health marketer with over ten years of experience creating educational resources focused on addiction recovery and treatment access. His work centers on helping individuals and families better understand substance use disorders, recovery pathways, and available support options

Reviewed By – Compliance Reviewer

Contributor

  • Noah Fischler
    Recovery Perspective Reviewer:

    Noah Fischler has been in recovery since 2018 following several years of heroin and meth addiction. He brings lived experience from both sides of the recovery process, having worked directly with individuals in crisis as a behavioral health technician and now in business development within the treatment field. Noah is an ISSA-certified personal trainer who integrates fitness and resilience-building into long-term recovery support.

     

Last reviewed: July 12, 2026

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