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The substate regions defined here were provided by the Alabama Department of Mental Health and Mental Retardation and are defined in terms of the State's 67 counties. | |||
Region 1 | Region 2 | Region 3 | Region 4 |
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Note: The substate regions defined for Alabama in this table are the same as the substate regions defined in Section D of the Substate Estimates from the 2002-2004 National Surveys on Drug Use and Health. | |||
Cherokee Colbert Cullman De Kalb Etowah Fayette Franklin Jackson Lamar Lauderdale Lawrence Limestone Madison Marion Marshall Morgan Walker Winston |
Bibb Blount Calhoun Chilton Clay Cleburne Coosa Jefferson Pickens Randolph Shelby St. Clair Talladega Tuscaloosa |
Autauga Bullock Chambers Choctaw Dallas Elmore Greene Hale Lee Lowndes Macon Marengo Montgomery Perry Pike Russell Sumter Tallapoosa Wilcox |
Baldwin Barbour Butler Clarke Coffee Conecuh Covington Crenshaw Dale Escambia Geneva Henry Houston Mobile Monroe Washington |
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The substate regions for Alaska are defined based on the planning areas documented in the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS) Health Status in Alaska report and in consultation with the Center for Substance Abuse Treatment (CSAT) State contact. | |||
Gulf Coast | Rural | Southeast | Urban |
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Note: The substate regions defined for Alaska in this table are the same as the substate regions defined in Section D of the Substate Estimates from the 2002-2004 National Surveys on Drug Use and Health. | |||
Kenai Peninsula Kodiak Island Valdez-Cordova |
Aleutians East Aleutians West Bethel Bristol Bay Denali Dillingham Lake and Peninsula Nome North Slope Northwest Arctic Wade Hampton Yukon-Koyukuk |
Haines Juneau Ketchikan Gateway Prince of Wales-Outer Ketchikan Sitka Skagway-Hoonah-Angoon Wrangell-Petersburg Yakutat |
Anchorage Fairbanks North Star Matanuska-Susitna Southeast Fairbanks |
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The substate regions defined here were provided by the State's Division of Behavioral Health Services, Arizona Department of Health Services, and are defined in terms of the State's 15 counties. The region definitions include nonadjacent counties being combined to form the Rural South region. | |||
Maricopa | Pima | Rural North | Rural South |
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Note: The substate regions defined for Arizona in this table are the same as the substate regions defined in Section D of the Substate Estimates from the 2002-2004 National Surveys on Drug Use and Health. | |||
Maricopa | Pima | Apache Coconino Mohave Navajo Yavapai |
Cochise Gila Graham Greenlee La Paz Pinal Santa Cruz Yuma |
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The substate regions defined here were provided by the Arkansas Department of Health and Human Services, Division of Behavioral Health Services, and are defined in terms of the State's 75 counties. | |||||
Areas 1 and 2 | Areas 3 and 4 | Areas 5 and 6 | |||
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Area 1 Benton Carroll Madison Washington |
Area 2 Baxter Boone Marion Newton Searcy |
Area 3 Cleburne Fulton Independence Izard Jackson Sharp Stone Van Buren White Woodruff |
Area 4 Clay Craighead Greene Lawrence Mississippi Poinsett Randolph |
Area 5 Crawford Franklin Logan Polk Scott Sebastian |
Area 6 Conway Faulkner Johnson Perry Pope Yell |
Areas 7, 12, and 13 | Areas 8, 10, and 11 | Area 9 | ||||
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Note: The substate regions defined for Arkansas in this table are different from the substate regions defined in Section D of the Substate Estimates from the 2002-2004 National Surveys on Drug Use and Health. However, one region, Area 9, is defined consistently across the two sets of region definitions. | ||||||
Area 7 Crittenden Cross Lee Monroe Phillips St. Francis |
Area 12 Arkansas Cleveland Grant Jefferson Lincoln |
Area 13 Ashley Bradley Chicot Desha Drew |
Area 8 Clark Garland Hot Spring Montgomery Pike |
Area 10 Hempstead Howard Lafayette Little River Miller Sevier |
Area 11 Calhoun Columbia Dallas Nevada Ouachita Union |
Lonoke Prairie Pulaski Saline |
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The substate regions defined here were created in consultation with the California Department of Alcohol and Drug Programs and are defined in terms of the State's 58 counties. | |||||||
Region 1 | Region 2 | Region 3 | Region 4 | Region 5 | Region 6 (Santa Clara) |
Region 7 | Region 8 |
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Note: The substate regions defined for California in this table are the same as the substate regions defined in Section D of the Substate Estimates from the 2002-2004 National Surveys on Drug Use and Health. | |||||||
Butte Colusa Del Norte Glenn Humboldt Lake Lassen Mendocino Modoc Plumas Shasta Siskiyou Tehama Trinity |
El Dorado Napa Nevada Placer Sacramento Sierra Solano Sonoma Sutter Yolo Yuba |
Alpine Amador Calaveras Merced San Joaquin Stanislaus Tuolumne |
Marin San Francisco San Mateo |
Alameda Contra Costa |
Santa Clara | Monterey San Benito Santa Cruz |
Fresno Kings Madera Mariposa Tulare |
Region 9 | Region 10 | Region 11 (Los Angeles) |
Region 12 | Region 13 (Riverside) | Region 14 (Orange) | Region 15 | |
Kern San Luis Obispo |
Santa Barbara Ventura |
Los Angeles | Inyo Mono San Bernardino |
Riverside | Orange | Imperial San Diego |
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The substate regions defined here were provided by the State's Alcohol and Drug Abuse Division, Colorado Department of Human Services, and are defined in terms of the State's 63 counties as of 2000. Due to sample size constraints, certain planning areas were combined to form substate regions. | |||||
Region 1 | Regions 2 and 7 | Region 3 | Region 4 | Regions 5 and 6 | |
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Note: The substate regions defined for Colorado in this table are the same as the substate regions defined in Section D of the Substate Estimates from the 2002-2004 National Surveys on Drug Use and Health. Note: Broomfield County, Colorado, was created in 2001. However, the NSDUH sample is based on the counties from the 2000 decennial census when the land area defined by Broomfield County was located in four counties (Adams, Boulder, Jefferson, and Weld); therefore, Broomfield County is not included in this list of substate regions. |
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Cheyenne Elbert Kit Carson Larimer Lincoln Logan Morgan Phillips Sedgwick Washington Weld Yuma |
Region 2 Adams Arapahoe Clear Creek Denver Douglas Gilpin Jefferson Region 7 Boulder |
Chaffee Custer El Paso Fremont Lake Park Teller |
Alamosa Baca Bent Conejos Costilla Crowley Huerfano Kiowa Las Animas Mineral Otero Prowers Pueblo Rio Grande Saguache |
Region 5 Archuleta Delta Dolores Gunnison Hinsdale La Plata Montezuma Montrose Ouray San Juan San Miguel |
Region 6 Eagle Garfield Grand Jackson Mesa Moffat Pitkin Rio Blanco Routt Summit |
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The Connecticut Department of Mental Health and Addiction Services indicated that planning areas in Connecticut are defined in terms of townships, which in turn are defined in terms of census tracts within the State's eight counties. Several townships formed a single substate region. | |
Note: The substate regions defined for Connecticut in this table are the same as the substate regions defined in Section D of the Substate Estimates from the 2002-2004 National Surveys on Drug Use and Health. | |
Eastern | Tracts 690100 – 870100 in New London County; Tracts 840100 – 881500 in Tolland County; Tracts 800300 – 908100 in Windham County |
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North Central | Tracts 400100 – 524100 in Hartford County; Tracts 425300 – 425500 in Litchfield County; Tracts 526100 – 538202, 890100, and 890200 in Tolland County |
Northwestern | Tracts 200100 – 257100 in Fairfield County; Tract 330100 in Hartford County; Tracts 250100 – 362102 in Litchfield County; Tracts 341100 – 361300 in New Haven County |
South Central | Tracts 110100 – 110600 in Fairfield County; Tracts 541100 – 680100 in Middlesex County; Tracts 120100 – 194202 in New Haven County; Tracts 650100 – 660102 in New London County |
Southwest | Tracts 010101 – 105200 in Fairfield County |
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The State's Division of Alcoholism, Drug Abuse and Mental Health, Delaware Department of Health and Social Services, defines its planning regions in terms of the State's three counties, with the exception of Wilmington City and New Castle regions. The Wilmington City region (that lies in New Castle County) was defined based on all the census tracts that are either fully or partially contained in Wilmington City. The New Castle region (excluding Wilmington City) comprises all the tracts that are in New Castle County except those in the Wilmington City limits. | |||
Kent | New Castle (excluding Wilmington City) | Sussex | Wilmington City |
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Note: The substate regions defined for Delaware in this table are the same as the substate regions defined in Section D of the Substate Estimates from the 2002-2004 National Surveys on Drug Use and Health. | |||
Kent | New Castle (excluding Wilmington City) | Sussex | Part of New Castle County (specified by tracts 000100 – 002700 and 012900) |
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The District of Columbia's Department of Operations, Addiction Prevention and Recovery Administration, indicated that wards could be used as substate regions. These wards can be described in terms of census tracts. If a tract overlapped ward boundaries, the tract was placed in the ward in which the majority of the tract fell. Ward 7 is made up of nonadjacent tracts. | |
Note: The substate regions defined for the District of Columbia in this table are the same as the substate regions defined in Section D of the Substate Estimates from the 2002-2004 National Surveys on Drug Use and Health. | |
Ward 1 | Tracts 002701 – 003200, 003400 – 004002, and 004400 |
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Ward 2 | Tracts 000100 – 000202, 004100 – 004300, 004801 – 005800, 006201, and 006202 |
Ward 3 | Tracts 000300 – 001401 |
Ward 4 | Tracts 001402 – 002301, 002400 – 002600, 009505, and 009507 |
Ward 5 | Tracts 002302, 003301, 003302, 004600, 008701 – 009504, 009508, and 009509 |
Ward 6 | Tracts 004700, 005900 – 006100, 006301 – 007200, 007901, and 008001 – 008600 |
Ward 7 | Tracts 007603 – 007809, 007903, 009601 – 009604, and 009901 – 009907 |
Ward 8 | Tracts 007301 – 007601 and 009700 – 009809 |
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The substate regions defined here were provided by the State's Substance Abuse Program Office, Florida Department of Children and Families, and are defined in terms of the State's 67 counties. As per the State's request, estimates for 18 circuits along with 5 aggregate regions and maps showing all 18 circuits are being produced. | ||||||
Region A | Region B | |||||
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Circuit | Circuit 2 | Circuit 14 | Circuits 3 and 8 | Circuit 4 | Circuit 7 | |
Escambia Okaloosa Santa Rosa Walton |
Franklin Gadsden Jefferson Leon Liberty Wakulla |
Bay Calhoun Gulf Holmes Jackson Washington |
Circuit 3 Columbia Dixie Hamilton Lafayette Madison Suwannee Taylor |
Circuit 8 Alachua Baker Bradford Gilchrist Levy Union |
Clay Duval Nassau |
Flagler Putnam St. Johns Volusia |
Region C | ||||
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Circuit 5 | Circuit 9 | Circuit 10 | Circuit 18 | Circuit 19 |
Citrus Hernando Lake Marion Sumter |
Orange Osceola |
Hardee Highlands Polk |
Brevard Seminole |
Indian River Martin Okeechobee St. Lucie |
Region D | Region E | |||||
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Circuits 11 and 16 | Circuit 15 | Circuit 17 | Circuit 6 | Circuit 12 | Circuit 13 | Circuit 20 |
Note: The substate regions defined for Florida in this table are different from the substate regions defined in Section D of the Substate Estimates from the 2002-2004 National Surveys on Drug Use and Health. However, eight regions correspond with each other across the two sets of region definitions. Table D10a shows the sets of regions that are defined consistently across the two sets of region definitions. | ||||||
Circuit 11 Miami-Dade Circuit 16 Monroe |
Palm Beach | Broward | Pasco Pinellas |
De Soto Manatee Sarasota |
Hillsborough | Charlotte Collier Glades Hendry Lee |
2002-2004 Substate Region | 2004-2006 Substate Region |
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District 1 | Circuit 1 |
District 13 | Circuit 5 |
District 14 | Circuit 10 |
District 15 | Circuit 19 |
District 11 | Circuits 11 and 16 |
District 9 (Palm Beach) | Circuit 15 (Palm Beach) |
District 10 (Broward) | Circuit 17 (Broward) |
District 8 | Circuit 20 |
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The substate regions defined here were provided by the Georgia Department of Human Resources and are defined in terms of the State's 159 counties. | |||||||
Region 1 | Region 2 | Region 3 | Region 4 | Region 5 | |||
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Note: The substate regions defined for Georgia in this table are the same as the substate regions defined in Section D of the Substate Estimates from the 2002-2004 National Surveys on Drug Use and Health. | |||||||
Bartow Butts Carroll Catoosa Chattooga Coweta Dade Fannin Floyd Gilmer Gordon Haralson Heard Lamar Meriwether Murray Paulding Pickens Pike Polk Spalding Troup Upson Walker Whitfield |
Banks Barrow Burke Clarke Columbia Dawson Elbert Forsyth Franklin Glascock Greene Habersham Hall Hancock Hart Jackson Jasper Jefferson Jenkins Lincoln Lumpkin Madison McDuffie Morgan Newton |
Oconee Oglethorpe Rabun Richmond Screven Stephens Taliaferro Towns Union Walton Warren Washington White Wilkes |
Cherokee Clayton Cobb De Kalb Douglas Fayette Fulton Gwinnett Henry Rockdale |
Baker Baldwin Bibb Calhoun Chattahoochee Clay Colquitt Crawford Crisp Decatur Dooly Dougherty Early Grady Harris Houston Jones Lee Macon Marion Miller Mitchell Monroe Muscogee Peach |
Pulaski Putnam Quitman Randolph Schley Seminole Stewart Sumter Talbot Taylor Terrell Thomas Twiggs Webster Wilkinson Worth |
Appling Atkinson Bacon Ben Hill Berrien Bleckley Brantley Brooks Bryan Bulloch Camden Candler Charlton Chatham Clinch Coffee Cook Dodge Echols Effingham Emanuel Evans Glynn Irwin Jeff Davis |
Johnson Lanier Laurens Liberty Long Lowndes McIntosh Montgomery Pierce Tattnall Telfair Tift Toombs Treutlen Turner Ware Wayne Wheeler Wilcox |
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The substate regions for Hawaii were defined in consultation with the State's Alcohol and Drug Abuse Division, Hawaii Department of Health. As per the State's request, estimates for four substate regions, corresponding to four counties in the State, along with one aggregate planning area (Kauai and Maui) and maps showing three regions (Hawaii Island, Honolulu, and Kauai and Maui) are being produced. Estimates will not be reported for Kauai County because of low precision as a result of the sample size being too small; hence, estimates will only be reported for the three remaining counties and the aggregate region containing Kauai and Maui Counties. | |||
Hawaii Island | Honolulu | Kauai and Maui | |
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Kauai | Maui | ||
Note: The substate regions defined for Hawaii in this table are different from the substate regions defined in Section D of the Substate Estimates from the 2002-2004 National Surveys on Drug Use and Health. Kauai and Maui are listed as separate regions in this table. However, two regions, Hawaii Island and Honolulu, remained consistent across the two sets of region definitions. | |||
Hawaii | Honolulu | Kauai | Maui |
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The substate regions defined here were provided by the State's Bureau of Mental Health and Substance Abuse, Division of Family and Community Services, Idaho Department of Health and Welfare, and are defined in terms of the State's 44 counties. | ||||||
Region 1 | Region 2 | Region 3 | Region 4 | Region 5 | Region 6 | Region 7 |
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Note: The substate regions defined for Idaho in this table are the same as the substate regions defined in Section D of the Substate Estimates from the 2002-2004 National Surveys on Drug Use and Health. | ||||||
Benewah Bonner Boundary Kootenai Shoshone |
Clearwater Idaho Latah Lewis Nez Perce |
Adams Canyon Gem Owyhee Payette Washington |
Ada Boise Elmore Valley |
Blaine Camas Cassia Gooding Jerome Lincoln Minidoka Twin Falls |
Bannock Bear Lake Bingham Caribou Franklin Oneida Power |
Bonneville Butte Clark Custer Fremont Jefferson Lemhi Madison Teton |
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The substate regions defined here were provided by the Illinois Department of Human Services and are defined in terms of the State's 102 counties. | |||||
Region 1 (Cook) | Region II | Region III | Region IV | Region V | |
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Note: The substate regions defined for Illinois in this table are the same as the substate regions defined in Section D of the Substate Estimates from the 2002-2004 National Surveys on Drug Use and Health. | |||||
Cook | Boone Carroll De Kalb Du Page Grundy Jo Daviess Kane Kankakee Kendall Lake Lee McHenry Ogle Stephenson Whiteside Will Winnebago |
Bureau Champaign Ford Fulton Henderson Henry Iroquois Knox La Salle Livingston Marshall Mason McDonough McLean Mercer Peoria Putnam Rock Island Stark Tazewell Vermilion Warren Woodford |
Adams Brown Calhoun Cass Christian Clark Coles Cumberland De Witt Douglas Edgar Effingham Greene Hancock Jersey Logan Macon Macoupin Menard Montgomery Morgan Moultrie Piatt Pike Sangamon Schuyler Scott Shelby |
Alexander Bond Clay Clinton Crawford Edwards Fayette Franklin Gallatin Hamilton Hardin Jackson Jasper Jefferson Johnson Lawrence Madison Marion Massac Monroe Perry Pope Pulaski Randolph Richland Saline St. Clair Union Wabash Washington Wayne White Williamson |
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The substate regions defined here were provided by the State's Division of Mental Health, Indiana Family and Social Services Administration, and are defined in terms of the State's 92 counties. | |||||||
Central | East | North Central | Northeast | Northwest | Southeast | Southwest | West |
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Note: The substate regions defined for Indiana in this table are the same as the substate regions defined in Section D of the Substate Estimates from the 2002-2004 National Surveys on Drug Use and Health. | |||||||
Boone Hamilton Hancock Hendricks Johnson Marion Morgan Shelby |
Blackford Delaware Fayette Grant Henry Jay Madison Randolph Rush Union Wayne |
Cass Elkhart Fulton Howard Kosciusko La Porte Marshall Miami St. Joseph Tipton Wabash |
Adams Allen De Kalb Huntington LaGrange Noble Steuben Wells Whitley |
Jasper Lake Newton Porter Pulaski Starke |
Bartholomew Brown Clark Crawford Dearborn Decatur Floyd Franklin Harrison Jackson Jefferson Jennings Lawrence Ohio Orange Ripley Scott Switzerland Washington |
Daviess Dubois Gibson Greene Knox Martin Perry Pike Posey Spencer Vanderburgh Warrick |
Benton Carroll Clay Clinton Fountain Monroe Montgomery Owen Parke Putnam Sullivan Tippecanoe Vermillion Vigo Warren White |
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The substate regions defined here were provided by the State's Division of Health Promotion, Prevention and Addictive Behaviors, Iowa Department of Public Health, and are defined in terms of the State's 99 counties. | |||||
Central | North Central | Northeast | Northwest | Southeast | Southwest |
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Note: The substate regions defined for Iowa in this table are the same as the substate regions defined in Section D of the Substate Estimates from the 2002-2004 National Surveys on Drug Use and Health. | |||||
Jasper Marion Polk Warren |
Boone Cerro Gordo Floyd Franklin Hancock Hardin Kossuth Marshall Mitchell Poweshiek Story Tama Winnebago Worth |
Allamakee Benton Black Hawk Bremer Buchanan Butler Chickasaw Clayton Clinton Delaware Dubuque Fayette Grundy Howard Jackson Jones Linn Winneshiek |
Audubon Buena Vista Calhoun Carroll Cherokee Clay Crawford Dickinson Emmet Greene Guthrie Hamilton Humboldt Ida Lyon Monona O'Brien Osceola Palo Alto Plymouth Pocahontas Sac Shelby Sioux Webster Woodbury Wright |
Appanoose Cedar Davis Des Moines Henry Iowa Jefferson Johnson Keokuk Lee Louisa Lucas Mahaska Monroe Muscatine Scott Van Buren Wapello Washington Wayne |
Adair Adams Cass Clarke Dallas Decatur Fremont Harrison Madison Mills Montgomery Page Pottawattamie Ringgold Taylor Union |
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The substate regions defined here were provided by the Addiction and Prevention Services, Kansas Department of Social and Rehabilitation Services, and are defined in terms of the State's 105 counties. | ||||||
Kansas City Metro | Northeast | South Central | Southeast | West | Wichita (Sedgwick) | |
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Note: The substate regions defined for Kansas in this table are the same as the substate regions defined in Section D of the Substate Estimates from the 2002-2004 National Surveys on Drug Use and Health. | ||||||
Douglas Franklin Johnson Leavenworth Miami Wyandotte |
Atchison Brown Clay Cloud Dickinson Doniphan Ellsworth Geary Jackson Jefferson Jewell Lincoln Marshall Mitchell Nemaha Osage Ottawa Pottawatomie Republic Riley Saline Shawnee Wabaunsee Washington |
Butler Chase Chautauqua Coffey Cowley Elk Greenwood Harper Harvey Kingman Lyon Marion McPherson Morris Reno Rice Sumner |
Allen Anderson Bourbon Cherokee Crawford Labette Linn Montgomery Neosho Wilson Woodson |
Barber Barton Cheyenne Clark Comanche Decatur Edwards Ellis Finney Ford Gove Graham Grant Gray Greeley Hamilton Haskell Hodgeman Kearny Kiowa Lane Logan Meade |
Morton Ness Norton Osborne Pawnee Phillips Pratt Rawlins Rooks Rush Russell Scott Seward Sheridan Sherman Smith Stafford Stanton Stevens Thomas Trego Wallace Wichita |
Sedgwick |
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The substate regions defined here were provided by the Kentucky Division of Mental Health and Substance Abuse and are defined in terms of the State's 120 counties. | ||||||||
Adanta, Cumberland River, and Lifeskills | Bluegrass, Comprehend, and North Key | Communicare and River Valley | Four Rivers and Pennyroyal |
Kentucky River, Mountain, and Pathways |
Seven Counties | |||
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Note: The substate regions defined for Kentucky in this table are the same as the substate regions defined in Section D of the Substate Estimates from the 2002-2004 National Surveys on Drug Use and Health. | ||||||||
Adanta Adair Casey Clinton Cumberland Green McCreary Pulaski Russell Taylor Wayne Cumberland River Bell Clay Harlan Jackson Knox Laurel Rockcastle Whitley |
Lifeskills Allen Barren Butler Edmonson Hart Logan Metcalfe Monroe Simpson Warren |
Bluegrass Anderson Bourbon Boyle Clark Estill Fayette Franklin Garrard Harrison Jessamine Lincoln Madison Mercer Nicholas Powell Scott Woodford |
Comprehend Bracken Fleming Lewis Mason Robertson North Key Boone Campbell Carroll Gallatin Grant Kenton Owen Pendleton |
Communicare Breckinridge Grayson Hardin Larue Marion Meade Nelson Washington River Valley Daviess Hancock Henderson McLean Ohio Union Webster |
Four Rivers Ballard Calloway Carlisle Fulton Graves Hickman Livingston Marshall McCracken Pennyroyal Caldwell Christian Crittenden Hopkins Lyon Muhlenberg Todd Trigg |
Kentucky River Breathitt Knott Lee Leslie Letcher Owsley Perry Wolfe Mountain Floyd Johnson Magoffin Martin Pike |
Pathways Bath Boyd Carter Elliott Greenup Lawrence Menifee Montgomery Morgan Rowan |
Bullitt Henry Jefferson Oldham Shelby Spencer Trimble |
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The substate regions defined here were provided by the State's Office for Addictive Disorders, Louisiana Department of Health and Hospitals, and are defined in terms of the State's 64 parishes. | ||||||
Region 1 | Regions 2 and 9 | Region 3 | Region 4 | Regions 5 and 6 | Regions 7 and 8 | Region 10 (Jefferson) |
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Note: The substate regions defined for Louisiana in this table are the same as the substate regions defined in Section D of the Substate Estimates from the 2002-2004 National Surveys on Drug Use and Health. | ||||||
Orleans Plaquemines St. Bernard |
Region 2 Ascension East Baton Rouge East Feliciana Iberville Pointe Coupee West Baton Rouge West Feliciana Region 9 Livingston St. Helena St. Tammany Tangipahoa Washington |
Assumption Lafourche St. Charles St. James St. John the Baptist St. Mary Terrebonne |
Acadia Evangeline Iberia Lafayette St. Landry St. Martin Vermilion |
Region 5 Allen Beauregard Calcasieu Cameron Jefferson Davis Region 6 Avoyelles Catahoula Concordia Grant La Salle Rapides Vernon Winn |
Region 7 Bienville Bossier Caddo Claiborne De Soto Natchitoches Red River Sabine Webster Region 8 Caldwell East Carroll Franklin Jackson Lincoln Madison Morehouse Ouachita Richland Tensas Union West Carroll |
Jefferson |
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The substate regions defined here were obtained from the State's Office of Substance Abuse, Maine Department of Health and Human Services, and are defined in terms of the State's 16 counties. | ||||||
Aroostook/Downeast | Central | Cumberland | Midcoast | Penquis | Western | York |
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Note: The substate regions defined for Maine in this table are different from the substate regions defined in Section D of the Substate Estimates from the 2002-2004 National Surveys on Drug Use and Health. However, three regions correspond with each other across the two sets of region definitions. Table D20a shows the sets of regions that are defined consistently across the two sets of region definitions. | ||||||
Aroostook Hancock Washington |
Kennebec Somerset |
Cumberland | Knox Lincoln Sagadahoc Waldo |
Penobscot Piscataquis |
Androscoggin Franklin Oxford |
York |
2002-2004 Substate Region | 2004-2006 Substate Region |
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Region 1 (Cumberland) | Cumberland |
Region 5 | Midcoast |
Region 2 (York) | York |
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The substate regions defined here were provided by the State's Alcohol and Drug Abuse Administration, Maryland Department of Health and Mental Hygiene, and are defined in terms of the State's 23 counties and the City of Baltimore. | ||||||||
Anne Arundel | Baltimore City | Baltimore County | Montgomery | North Central | Northeast | Prince George's | South | West |
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Note: The substate regions defined for Maryland in this table are different from the substate regions defined in Section D of the Substate Estimates from the 2002-2004 National Surveys on Drug Use and Health. However, four regions, Anne Arundel, Baltimore City, Montgomery, and Prince George's, are defined consistently across the two sets of region definitions. | ||||||||
Anne Arundel | Baltimore City | Baltimore | Montgomery | Carroll Howard |
Caroline Cecil Harford Kent Queen Anne's Talbot |
Prince George's | Calvert Charles Dorchester St. Mary's Somerset Wicomico Worcester |
Allegany Frederick Garrett Washington |
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The substate regions defined here are based on information provided by the State's Bureau of Substance Abuse Services, Massachusetts Department of Public Health, and are defined in terms of census tracts within the State's 14 counties. | |
Note: The substate regions defined for Massachusetts in this table are the same as the substate regions defined in Section D of the Substate Estimates from the 2002-2004 National Surveys on Drug Use and Health. | |
Boston | Tracts 400100 – 401200 in Norfolk County; Tracts 000100 – 180500 in Suffolk County |
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Central | Tracts 813800 in Hampden County; Tracts 300100 – 302200 and 325100 – 327103 in Middlesex County; Tracts 408101, 408102, and 442101 – 443102 in Norfolk County; Tracts 700100 – 702200, 705100 – 739500, and 743100 – 761100 in Worcester County |
Metrowest | Tracts 320101 – 324100, 331101 – 333600, 338100 – 338500, and 350100 – 388100 in Middlesex County; Tracts 402101 – 407100, 409101 – 420302, and 422100 – 441202 in Norfolk County; Tracts 500101 – 501202 and 504101 – 505200 in Plymouth County; Tracts 740101 – 742400 in Worcester County |
Northeast | Tracts 201100 – 270100 in Essex County; Tracts 310100 – 318400, 328100 – 330200, 334100 – 337300, and 339100 – 342600 in Middlesex County |
Southeast | Tracts 010100 – 015200 in Barnstable County; Tracts 600100 – 655400 in Bristol County; Tracts 200100 – 200400 in Dukes County; Tracts 950100 – 950500 in Nantucket County; Tracts 421100, 421200, and 456101 – 457100 in Norfolk County; Tracts 502101 – 503102 and 506101 – 561100 in Plymouth County |
Western | Tracts 900100 – 935100 in Berkshire County; Tracts 040100 – 041500 in Franklin County; Tracts 800100 – 813700 in Hampden County; Tracts 820101 – 822700 in Hampshire County; Tracts 703100 – 704200 in Worcester County |
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The substate regions defined here were provided by the State's Bureau of Substance Abuse and Addiction Services, Michigan Department of Community Health. All substate regions for Michigan are defined in terms of the State's 83 counties, with the exception of the Detroit City and Southeast regions. The Detroit City region (that lies in Wayne County) is defined based on all of the census tracts that are either fully or partially contained in Detroit City. The Southeast region comprises Monroe County and all the tracts that are in Wayne County (except those in the Detroit City limits). Some substate regions for Michigan are defined in terms of nonadjacent counties. | |||||||||
Bay | Detroit City | Genesee | Kalamazoo | Kent | Lakeshore | Macomb | Mid South | ||
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Note: The substate regions defined for Michigan in this table are different from the substate regions defined in Section D of the Substate Estimates from the 2002-2004 National Surveys on Drug Use and Health. The Kalamazoo, Lakeshore, and Mid South regions are defined differently across the two sets of substate region definitions; however, the remaining 13 regions are defined consistently across the two sets of substate region definitions. | |||||||||
Arenac Bay Huron Montcalm Shiawassee Tuscola |
Part of Wayne County (specified by Tracts 500100 – 546900 and 551600) | Genesee | Barry Branch Calhoun Cass Kalamazoo St. Joseph Van Buren |
Kent | Allegan Berrien Muskegon Ottawa |
Macomb | Clinton Eaton Gratiot Hillsdale Ingham Ionia Jackson Lenawee Newaygo |
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Northern | Oakland | Pathways | Saginaw | Southeast | St. Clair | Washtenaw | Western | ||
Alcona Alpena Antrim Benzie Charlevoix Cheboygan Clare Crawford Emmet Gladwin Grand Traverse Iosco Isabella Kalkaska Lake |
Leelanau Manistee Mason Mecosta Midland Missaukee Montmorency Oceana Ogemaw Osceola Oscoda Otsego Presque Isle Roscommon Wexford |
Oakland | Alger Chippewa Delta Luce Mackinac Marquette Menominee Schoolcraft |
Saginaw | Monroe Wayne (excluding Detroit City) |
Lapeer Sanilac St. Clair |
Livingston Washtenaw |
Baraga Dickinson Gogebic Houghton Iron Keweenaw Ontonagon |
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The substate planning regions defined here were determined in consultation with the Minnesota Department of Human Services and are defined in terms of the State's 87 counties. These regions are defined such that they are nested within the metropolitan and nonmetropolitan areas for the State. | ||||||||
Regions 1 and 2 | Regions 3 and 4 | Regions 5 and 6 | Region 7A (Hennepin) |
Region 7B (Ramsey) |
Region 7C | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Note: The substate regions defined for Minnesota in this table are the same as the substate regions defined in Section D of the Substate Estimates from the 2002-2004 National Surveys on Drug Use and Health. | ||||||||
Region 1 Becker Beltrami Clearwater Hubbard Kittson Lake of the Woods Mahnomen Marshall Norman Pennington Polk Red Lake Roseau |
Region 2 Aitkin Carlton Cook Itasca Koochiching Lake St. Louis |
Region 3 Cass Clay Crow Wing Douglas Grant Otter Tail Pope Stevens Todd Traverse Wadena Wilkin |
Region 4 Benton Chisago Isanti Kanabec Mille Lacs Morrison Pine Sherburne Stearns Wright |
Region 5 Big Stone Blue Earth Brown Chippewa Cottonwood Faribault Jackson Kandiyohi Lac qui Parle Le Sueur Lincoln Lyon Martin McLeod Meeker Murray Nicollet Nobles Pipestone Redwood Renville Rock Sibley Swift Waseca Watonwan Yellow Medicine |
Region 6 Dodge Fillmore Freeborn Goodhue Houston Mower Olmsted Rice Steele Wabasha Winona |
Hennepin | Ramsey | Anoka Carver Dakota Scott Washington |
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The substate regions defined here were provided by the State's Department of Mental Health and are the State's Needs Assessment Project Planning Regions. These regions are defined in terms of the State's 82 counties. | ||||||
Region 1 | Region 2 | Region 3 | Region 4 | Region 5 | Region 6 | Region 7 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Note: The substate regions defined for Mississippi in this table are the same as the substate regions defined in Section D of the Substate Estimates from the 2002-2004 National Surveys on Drug Use and Health. | ||||||
Alcorn Benton Calhoun Chickasaw De Soto Itawamba Lafayette Lee Marshall Monroe Panola Pontotoc Prentiss Tate Tippah Tishomingo Union Yalobusha |
Attala Bolivar Carroll Coahoma Grenada Holmes Humphreys Issaquena Leflore Montgomery Quitman Sharkey Sunflower Tallahatchie Tunica Warren Washington Yazoo |
Choctaw Clarke Clay Jasper Kemper Lauderdale Leake Lowndes Neshoba Newton Noxubee Oktibbeha Scott Smith Webster Winston |
Copiah Hinds Madison Rankin Simpson |
Adams Amite Claiborne Franklin Jefferson Lawrence Lincoln Pike Walthall Wilkinson |
Covington Forrest Greene Jefferson Davis Jones Lamar Marion Perry Wayne |
George Hancock Harrison Jackson Pearl River Stone |
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The substate regions defined here were provided by the Missouri Department of Mental Health and are defined in terms of the State's 114 counties and St. Louis City. As per the State's request, estimates for seven substate regions along with two aggregate planning areas (Eastern and Northwest) and maps showing all seven regions are being produced. | ||||||||
Central | Eastern | Northwest | Southeast | Southwest | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Eastern (St. Louis City and County) | Eastern (excluding St. Louis) | Northwest (Jackson) | Northwest (excluding Jackson) | |||||
Note: The substate regions defined for Missouri in this table are the same as the substate regions defined in Section D of the Substate Estimates from the 2002-2004 National Surveys on Drug Use and Health. | ||||||||
Adair Audrain Boone Callaway Camden Carroll Chariton Clark Cole Cooper Howard Knox Laclede Lewis Macon Marion Miller Moniteau Monroe Montgomery Morgan Osage Pettis Pike Pulaski Ralls Randolph Saline Schuyler Scotland Shelby |
St. Louis St. Louis City |
Franklin Jefferson Lincoln St. Charles Warren |
Jackson | Andrew Atchison Buchanan Caldwell Cass Clay Clinton Daviess De Kalb Gentry Grundy Harrison Holt Johnson Lafayette Linn Livingston Mercer Nodaway Platte Putnam Ray Sullivan Worth |
Bollinger Butler Cape Girardeau Carter Crawford Dent Douglas Dunklin Gasconade Howell Iron Madison Maries Mississippi New Madrid Oregon Ozark Pemiscot Perry Phelps Reynolds Ripley Scott Shannon St. Francois Ste. Genevieve Stoddard Texas Washington Wayne Wright |
Barry Barton Bates Benton Cedar Christian Dade Dallas Greene Henry Hickory Jasper Lawrence McDonald Newton Polk St. Clair Stone Taney Vernon Webster |
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The substate regions defined here were provided by the Chemical Dependency Bureau of the Montana Department of Health and Human Services and are defined in terms of the State's 56 counties. | ||||
Region 1 | Region 2 | Region 3 | Region 4 | Region 5 |
---|---|---|---|---|
Note: The substate regions defined for Montana in this table are the same as the substate regions defined in Section D of the Substate Estimates from the 2002-2004 National Surveys on Drug Use and Health. | ||||
Carter Custer Daniels Dawson Fallon Garfield McCone Phillips Powder River Prairie Richland Roosevelt Rosebud Sheridan Treasure Valley Wibaux |
Blaine Cascade Chouteau Glacier Hill Liberty Pondera Teton Toole |
Big Horn Carbon Fergus Golden Valley Judith Basin Musselshell Petroleum Stillwater Sweet Grass Wheatland Yellowstone |
Beaverhead Broadwater Deer Lodge Gallatin Granite Jefferson Lewis and Clark Madison Meagher Park Powell Silver Bow |
Flathead Lake Lincoln Mineral Missoula Ravalli Sanders |
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The substate regions defined here were provided by the State's Division of Behavioral Health Services, Nebraska Department of Health and Human Services, and are defined in terms of the State's 93 counties. | |||||
Regions 1 and 2 | Region 3 | Region 4 | Region 5 | Region 6 | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Note: The substate regions defined for Nebraska in this table are the same as the substate regions defined in Section D of the Substate Estimates from the 2002-2004 National Surveys on Drug Use and Health. | |||||
Region 1 Banner Box Butte Cheyenne Dawes Deuel Garden Kimball Morrill Scotts Bluff Sheridan Sioux |
Region 2 Arthur Chase Dawson Dundy Frontier Gosper Grant Hayes Hitchcock Hooker Keith Lincoln Logan McPherson Perkins Red Willow Thomas |
Adams Blaine Buffalo Clay Custer Franklin Furnas Garfield Greeley Hall Hamilton Harlan Howard Kearney Loup Merrick Nuckolls Phelps Sherman Valley Webster Wheeler |
Antelope Boone Boyd Brown Burt Cedar Cherry Colfax Cuming Dakota Dixon Holt Keya Paha Knox Madison Nance Pierce Platte Rock Stanton Thurston Wayne |
Butler Fillmore Gage Jefferson Johnson Lancaster Nemaha Otoe Pawnee Polk Richardson Saline Saunders Seward Thayer York |
Cass Dodge Douglas Sarpy Washington |
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The substate regions defined here were provided by the State's Bureau of Alcohol and Drug Abuse, Nevada Department of Human Resources, and are defined in terms of the State's 16 counties and Carson City. | |||||
Clark | Rural | Washoe | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Note: The substate regions defined for Nevada in this table are the same as the substate regions defined in Section D of the Substate Estimates from the 2002-2004 National Surveys on Drug Use and Health. | |||||
Clark | Carson City Churchill Douglas Elko Esmeralda Eureka Humboldt Lander Lincoln Lyon Mineral Nye Pershing Storey White Pine |
Washoe |
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The substate regions defined here were provided by the New Hampshire Office of Alcohol and Drug Policy, Department of Health and Human Services, and are defined in terms of the State's 10 counties. As per the State's request, estimates for five substate regions along with two aggregate planning areas (Central and Southern) and maps showing three regions (Central, Northern, and Southern) are being produced. | ||||
Central | Northern | Southern | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Central 1 | Central 2 | Southern 1 (Rockingham) | Southern 2 | |
Note: The substate regions defined for New Hampshire in this table are the same as the substate regions defined in Section D of the Substate Estimates from the 2002-2004 National Surveys on Drug Use and Health. | ||||
Belknap Strafford |
Merrimack Sullivan |
Carroll Coos Grafton |
Rockingham | Cheshire Hillsborough |
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The substate regions defined here were provided by the Division of Addiction Services, New Jersey Department of Human Services, and are defined in terms of the State's 21 counties. | |||
Central | Metropolitan | Northern | Southern |
---|---|---|---|
Note: The substate regions defined for New Jersey in this table are the same as the substate regions defined in Section D of the Substate Estimates from the 2002-2004 National Surveys on Drug Use and Health. | |||
Hunterdon Mercer Monmouth Ocean Somerset |
Essex Middlesex Union |
Bergen Hudson Morris Passaic Sussex Warren |
Atlantic Burlington Camden Cape May Cumberland Gloucester Salem |
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The substate regions defined here were provided by the Behavioral Health Services Division, New Mexico Department of Health, and are defined in terms of the State's 33 counties. | ||||
Region 1 | Region 2 | Region 3 (Bernalillo) | Region 4 | Region 5 |
---|---|---|---|---|
Note: The substate regions defined for New Mexico in this table are the same as the substate regions defined in Section D of the Substate Estimates from the 2002-2004 National Surveys on Drug Use and Health. | ||||
Cibola McKinley Sandoval San Juan Valencia |
Colfax Guadalupe Los Alamos Mora Rio Arriba San Miguel Santa Fe Taos Union |
Bernalillo | Chaves Curry De Baca Eddy Harding Lea Quay Roosevelt |
Catron Dona Ana Grant Hidalgo Lincoln Luna Otero Sierra Socorro Torrance |
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The substate regions defined here were obtained from the New York State Office of Alcoholism and Substance Abuse Services and are defined in terms of the State's 62 counties. As per the State's request, estimates for 15 substate regions along with 4 aggregate planning areas (Regions A, B, C, and D) and maps showing the 4 planning areas are being produced. | ||||||
Region A | Region B | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Region 1 | Region 2 | Region 3 | Region 4 | Region 5 | Region 6 | Region 7 |
Bronx | Kings Richmond |
New York | Queens | Nassau Suffolk |
Putnam Rockland Westchester |
Dutchess Orange Ulster |
Region C | Region D | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Region 8 | Region 9 | Region 10 | Region 11 | Region 12 | Region 13 | Region 14 | Region 15 |
Note: The aggregate substate regions defined for New York in this table are different from the aggregate substate regions defined in Section D of the Substate Estimates from the 2002-2004 National Surveys on Drug Use and Health. However, two aggregate regions, Region A and Region D, are defined consistently across the two sets of aggregate region definitions. The 15 substate regions (Regions 1 to Regions 15) are defined consistently across the two sets of region definitions. | |||||||
Albany Rensselaer Saratoga Schenectady Schoharie Warren Washington |
Herkimer Madison Oneida Onondaga Oswego |
Broome Chemung Tioga Tompkins |
Livingston Monroe Ontario Orleans Wayne |
Erie Niagara |
Cayuga Chenango Columbia Cortland Delaware Greene Otsego Sullivan |
Clinton Essex Franklin Fulton Hamilton Jefferson Lewis Montgomery St. Lawrence |
Allegany Cattaraugus Chautauqua Genesee Schuyler Seneca Steuben Wyoming Yates |
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The substate regions defined here were provided by the North Carolina Division of Mental Health, Development Disabilities and Substance Abuse Services, Department of Health and Human Services, and are defined in terms of the State's 100 counties. | |||
Eastern | North Central | South Central | Western |
---|---|---|---|
Note: The substate regions defined for North Carolina in this table are different from the substate regions defined in Section D of the Substate Estimates from the 2002-2004 National Surveys on Drug Use and Health. However, two regions, South Central and Western, are defined consistently across the two sets of region definitions. | |||
Beaufort Bertie Brunswick Camden Carteret Chowan Craven Currituck Dare Duplin Edgecombe Gates Greene Hertford Hyde Jones Lenoir Martin Nash New Hanover Northampton Onslow Pamlico Pasquotank Pender Perquimans Pitt Sampson Tyrrell Washington Wayne Wilson |
Alamance Caswell Chatham Davie Durham Forsyth Franklin Granville Guilford Halifax Iredell Orange Person Rockingham Stokes Surry Vance Warren Yadkin |
Anson Bladen Columbus Cumberland Davidson Harnett Hoke Johnston Lee Montgomery Moore Randolph Richmond Robeson Scotland Wake |
Alexander Alleghany Ashe Avery Buncombe Burke Cabarrus Caldwell Catawba Cherokee Clay Cleveland Gaston Graham Haywood Henderson Jackson Lincoln Macon Madison McDowell Mecklenburg Mitchell Polk Rowan Rutherford Stanly Swain Transylvania Union Watauga Wilkes Yancey |
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The substate regions defined here were provided by the State's Division of Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services, North Dakota Department of Human Services, and are defined in terms of the State's 53 counties. | |||||||
Badlands and West Central | Lake Region and South Central | North Central and Northwest | Northeast | Southeast | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Note: The substate regions defined for North Dakota in this table are the same as the substate regions defined in Section D of the Substate Estimates from the 2002-2004 National Surveys on Drug Use and Health. | |||||||
Badlands Adams Billings Bowman Dunn Golden Valley Hettinger Slope Stark |
West Central Burleigh Emmons Grant Kidder McLean Mercer Morton Oliver Sheridan Sioux |
Lake Benson Cavalier Eddy Ramsey Rolette Towner |
South Central Barnes Dickey Foster Griggs La Moure Logan McIntosh Stutsman Wells |
North Central Bottineau Burke McHenry Mountrail Pierce Renville Ward |
Northwest Divide McKenzie Williams |
Grand Forks Nelson Pembina Walsh |
Cass Ransom Richland Sargent Steele Traill |
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The Ohio Department of Alcohol and Drug Addiction Services suggested that it would be useful to provide substance use estimates for Ohio boards, which in turn are defined using the State's 88 counties. Due to sample size constraints, in consultation with the State's Center for Substance Abuse Treatment (CSAT) contact, adjacent boards were combined to form substate regions. Urban and rural counties were not collapsed together to form substate regions. | |||||||
Boards 2, 46, 55, and 68 | Boards 3, 52, and 85 | Boards 4 and 78 | Boards 5 and 60 | Boards 7, 15, 41, 79, and 84 | Boards 8, 13, and 83 | Board 9 (Butler) | Board 12 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Board 2 Allen Auglaize Hardin Board 46 Champaign Logan Board 55 Darke Miami Shelby Board 68 Preble |
Board 3 Ashland Board 52 Medina Board 85 Holmes Wayne |
Board 4 Ashtabula Board 78 Trumbull |
Board 5 Athens Hocking Vinton Board 60 Coshocton Guernsey Morgan Muskingum Noble Perry |
Board 7 Belmont Harrison Monroe Board 15 Columbiana Board 41 Jefferson Board 79 Carroll Tuscarawas Board 84 Washington |
Board 8 Brown Board 13 Clermont Board 83 Clinton Warren |
Butler | Clark Greene Madison |
Boards 18 and 47 | Boards 20, 32, 54, and 69 | Boards 21, 39, 51, 70, and 80 | Boards 22, 74, and 87 | Boards 23 and 45 | Board 25 (Franklin) | Boards 27, 71, and 73 | Boards 28, 43, and 67 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Note: The substate regions defined for Ohio in this table are the same as the substate regions defined in Section D of the Substate Estimates from the 2002-2004 National Surveys on Drug Use and Health. | |||||||
Board 18 Cuyahoga Board 47 Lorain |
Board 20 Defiance Fulton Henry Williams Board 32 Hancock Board 54 Mercer Paulding Van Wert Board 69 Putnam |
Board 21 Delaware Morrow Board 39 Huron Board 51 Crawford Marion Board 70 Richland Board 80 Union |
Board 22 Erie Ottawa Board 74 Sandusky Seneca Wyandot Board 87 Wood |
Board 23 Fairfield Board 45 Knox Licking |
Franklin | Board 27 Gallia Jackson Meigs Board 71 Fayette Highland Pickaway Pike Ross Board 73 Adams Lawrence Scioto |
Board 28 Geauga Board 43 Lake Board 67 Portage |
Board 31 (Hamilton) | Board 48 (Lucas) | Boards 50 and 76 | Board 57 (Montgomery) | Board 77 (Summit) | |||
Hamilton | Lucas | Mahoning Stark |
Montgomery | Summit |
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The substate regions defined here were provided by the Oklahoma Department of Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services and are defined in terms of the State's 77 counties. | |||||||
Central | East Central | Northeast | Northwest and Southwest | Oklahoma County | Southeast | Tulsa County | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Note: The substate regions defined for Oklahoma in this table are the same as the substate regions defined in Section D of the Substate Estimates from the 2002-2004 National Surveys on Drug Use and Health. | |||||||
Canadian Cleveland Grady McClain |
Adair Cherokee Creek Lincoln McIntosh Muskogee Okfuskee Okmulgee Sequoyah Wagoner |
Craig Delaware Kay Mayes Noble Nowata Osage Ottawa Pawnee Payne Rogers Washington |
Northwest Alfalfa Beaver Cimarron Ellis Garfield Grant Harper Kingfisher Logan Major Texas Woods Woodward |
Southwest Beckham Blaine Caddo Comanche Cotton Custer Dewey Greer Harmon Jackson Jefferson Kiowa Roger Mills Stephens Tillman Washita |
Oklahoma | Atoka Bryan Carter Choctaw Coal Garvin Haskell Hughes Johnston Latimer Le Flore Love Marshall McCurtain Murray Pittsburg Pontotoc Pottawatomie Pushmataha Seminole |
Tulsa |
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The substate regions defined here were provided by the State's Office of Mental Health and Addiction Services, Department of Human Services, and are defined in terms of the State's 36 counties. | ||||
Region 1 (Multnomah) | Region 2 | Region 3 | Region 4 | Region 5 |
---|---|---|---|---|
Note: The substate regions defined for Oregon in this table are the same as the substate regions defined in Section D of the Substate Estimates from the 2002-2004 National Surveys on Drug Use and Health. | ||||
Multnomah | Clackamas Washington |
Benton Clatsop Columbia Lane Lincoln Linn Marion Polk Tillamook Yamhill |
Coos Curry Douglas Jackson Josephine Klamath |
Baker Crook Deschutes Gilliam Grant Harney Hood River Jefferson Lake Malheur Morrow Sherman Umatilla Union Wallowa Wasco Wheeler |
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The substate regions defined here were provided by the State's Bureau of Drug and Alcohol Programs, Department of Health, and are defined in terms of the State's 67 counties. | |||||||
Region 1 (Allegheny) |
Regions 2, 3, 8, and 9 |
Regions 4, 11, 37, and 49 |
Regions 5, 18, 23, 24, and 46 |
Regions 6, 12, 16, 31, 35, 39, 45, and 47 |
Regions 7, 13, 20, and 33 |
Regions 10, 14, 15, 27, 32, 43, and 44 |
|
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Allegheny | Region 2 Armstrong Indiana Region 3 Beaver Region 8 Butler Region 9 Cambria |
Region 4 Berks Region 11 Carbon Monroe Pike Region 37 Schuylkill Region 49 Wayne |
Region 5 Blair Region 18 Cumberland Perry Region 23 Franklin Fulton Region 24 Huntingdon Juniata Mifflin Region 46 Bedford |
Region 6 Bradford Sullivan Region 12 Centre Region 16 Columbia Montour Snyder Union Region 31 Clinton Lycoming Region 35 Northumberland Region 39 Susquehanna Region 45 Tioga Region 47 Potter |
Region 7 Bucks Region 13 Chester Region 20 Delaware Region 33 Montgomery |
Region 10 Cameron Elk McKean Region 14 Clarion Region 15 Clearfield Jefferson Region 27 Lawrence Region 32 Mercer Region 43 Forest Warren Region 44 Venango |
Regions 17 and 21 | Regions 19, 26, 28, and 42 | Regions 22, 38, 40, 41, and 48 | Regions 25 and 30 | Regions 29 and 34 | Region 36 (Philadelphia) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Note: The substate regions defined for Pennsylvania in this table are the same as the substate regions defined in Section D of the Substate Estimates from the 2002-2004 National Surveys on Drug Use and Health; however, the names of some of the regions have changed. Table D39a shows the regions that correspond with each other across the two sets of region definitions. | |||||
Region 17 Crawford Region 21 Erie |
Region 19 Dauphin Region 26 Lancaster Region 28 Lebanon Region 42 Adams York |
Region 22 Fayette Region 38 Somerset Region 40 Washington Region 41 Westmoreland Region 48 Greene |
Region 25 Lackawanna Region 30 Luzerne Wyoming |
Region 29 Lehigh Region 34 Northampton |
Philadelphia |
2002-2004 Substate Region | 2004-2006 Substate Region |
---|---|
Region 1 (Allegheny) | Region 1 (Allegheny) |
Regions 2, 3, 8, and 9 | Regions 2, 3, 8, and 9 |
Regions 4, 11, 42, and 46 | Regions 4, 11, 37, and 49 |
Regions 5, 20, 26, 28, and 40 | Regions 5, 18, 23, 24, and 46 |
Regions 6, 12, 16, 35 39, 41, 44, and 45 | Regions 6, 12, 16, 31, 35, 39, 45, and 47 |
Regions 7, 13, 22, and 37 | Regions 7, 13, 20, and 33 |
Region 10, 14, 15, 25, 31, 36, and 46 | Regions 10, 14, 15, 27, 32, 43, and 44 |
Regions 19 and 23 | Regions 17 and 21 |
Regions 21, 30, 32, and 49 | Regions 19, 26, 28, and 42 |
Regions 17, 24, 27, 43, and 47 | Regions 22, 38, 40, 41, and 48 |
Regions 29 and 34 | Regions 25 and 30 |
Regions 33 and 38 | Regions 29 and 34 |
Region 18 (Philadelphia) | Region 36 (Philadelphia) |
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The substate planning areas defined here were determined in consultation with the Rhode Island Department of Mental Health, Retardation and Hospitals and are defined in terms of the State's five counties. | |||
Bristol and Newport | Kent | Providence | Washington |
---|---|---|---|
Note: The substate regions defined for Rhode Island in this table are the same as the substate regions defined in Section D of the Substate Estimates from the 2002-2004 National Surveys on Drug Use and Health. | |||
Bristol Newport |
Kent | Providence | Washington |
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The substate regions defined here were provided by the South Carolina Department of Alcohol and Other Drug Abuse Services and are defined in terms of the State's 46 counties. | |||
Region 1 | Region 2 | Region 3 | Region 4 |
---|---|---|---|
Note: The substate regions defined for South Carolina in this table are the same as the substate regions defined in Section D of the Substate Estimates from the 2002-2004 National Surveys on Drug Use and Health. | |||
Anderson Cherokee Greenville Oconee Pickens Spartanburg Union |
Abbeville Chester Chesterfield Edgefield Fairfield Greenwood Kershaw Lancaster Laurens Lee Lexington McCormick Newberry Richland Saluda York |
Clarendon Darlington Dillon Florence Georgetown Horry Marion Marlboro Sumter Williamsburg |
Aiken Allendale Bamberg Barnwell Beaufort Berkeley Calhoun Charleston Colleton Dorchester Hampton Jasper Orangeburg |
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The substate regions defined here were determined in consultation with the State's Division of Alcohol and Drug Abuse, South Dakota Department of Human Services, and are defined in terms of the State's 66 counties. | ||||||
Region 1 | Region 2 | Region 3 | Region 4 | Region 5 | Region 6 | Region 7 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Note: The substate regions defined for South Dakota in this table are different from the substate regions defined in Section D of the Substate Estimates from the 2002-2004 National Surveys on Drug Use and Health. | ||||||
Aurora Brule Bon Homme Buffalo Charles Mix Clay Davison Douglas Hanson Hutchinson McCook Turner Union Yankton |
Lincoln Minnehaha |
Beadle Brookings Clark Codington Deuel Grant Hamlin Hand Jerauld Kingsbury Lake Miner Moody Sanborn |
Butte Corson Dewey Harding Lawrence Meade Perkins Ziebach |
Brown Campbell Day Edmunds Faulk Marshall McPherson Roberts Spink Walworth |
Bennett Gregory Haakon Hughes Hyde Jackson Jones Lyman Mellette Potter Stanley Sully Todd Tripp |
Custer Fall River Pennington Shannon |
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The substate regions defined here were provided by the State's Bureau of Alcohol and Drug Abuse Services, Tennessee Department of Health, and are defined in terms of the State's 95 counties. | ||||||
Region 1 | Region 2 | Region 3 | Region 4 (Davidson) | Region 5 | Region 6 | Region 7 (Shelby) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Note: The substate regions defined for Tennessee in this table are the same as the substate regions defined in Section D of the Substate Estimates from the 2002-2004 National Surveys on Drug Use and Health. | ||||||
Carter Greene Hancock Hawkins Johnson Sullivan Unicoi Washington |
Anderson Blount Campbell Claiborne Cocke Grainger Hamblen Jefferson Knox Loudon Monroe Morgan Roane Scott Sevier Union |
Bledsoe Bradley Cannon Clay Cumberland DeKalb Fentress Franklin Grundy Hamilton Jackson Macon Marion McMinn Meigs Overton Pickett Polk Putnam Rhea Sequatchie Smith Van Buren Warren White |
Davidson | Bedford Cheatham Coffee Dickson Giles Hickman Houston Humphreys Lawrence Lewis Lincoln Marshall Maury Montgomery Moore Perry Robertson Rutherford Stewart Sumner Trousdale Wayne Williamson Wilson |
Benton Carroll Chester Crockett Decatur Dyer Fayette Gibson Hardeman Hardin Haywood Henderson Henry Lake Lauderdale Madison McNairy Obion Tipton Weakley |
Shelby |
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The substate region definitions were obtained from the Texas Department of State Health Services and are defined in terms of the State's 254 counties. As per the State's request, estimates for 15 substate regions along with 4 aggregate planning areas (Regions 3, 6, 7, and 11) and maps showing 11 regions (Regions 1 to 11) are being produced. | ||||||
Region 1 | Region 2 | Region 3 | Region 4 | Region 5 | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Region 3a | Region 3bc | |||||
Armstrong Bailey Briscoe Carson Castro Childress Cochran Collingsworth Crosby Dallam Deaf Smith Dickens Donley Floyd Garza Gray Hale Hall Hansford Hartley Hemphill Hockley Hutchinson King Lamb Lipscomb |
Lubbock Lynn Moore Motley Ochiltree Oldham Parmer Potter Randall Roberts Sherman Swisher Terry Wheeler Yoakum |
Archer Baylor Brown Callahan Clay Coleman Comanche Cottle Eastland Fisher Foard Hardeman Haskell Jack Jones Kent Knox Mitchell Montague Nolan Runnels Scurry Shackelford Stephens Stonewall Taylor Throckmorton Wichita Wilbarger Young |
Collin Dallas Denton Ellis Hunt Kaufman Navarro Rockwall |
Cooke Erath Fannin Grayson Hood Johnson Palo Pinto Parker Somervell Tarrant Wise |
Anderson Bowie Camp Cass Cherokee Delta Franklin Gregg Harrison Henderson Hopkins Lamar Marion Morris Panola Rains Red River Rusk Smith Titus Upshur Van Zandt Wood |
Angelina Hardin Houston Jasper Jefferson Nacogdoches Newton Orange Polk Sabine San Augustine San Jacinto Shelby Trinity Tyler |
Region 6 | Region 7 | Region 8 | Region 9 | Region 10 | Region 11 | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Region 6a | Region 6bc | Region 7a | Region 7bcd | Region 11abd | Region 11c (Hidalgo) |
|||
Note: The substate regions defined for Texas in this table are the same as the substate regions defined in Section D of the Substate Estimates from the 2002-2004 National Surveys on Drug Use and Health. | ||||||||
Austin Chambers Colorado Fort Bend Harris Liberty Montgomery Walker Waller Wharton |
Brazoria Galveston Matagorda |
Bastrop Blanco Burnet Caldwell Fayette Hays Lee Llano Travis Williamson |
Bell Bosque Brazos Burleson Coryell Falls Freestone Grimes Hamilton Hill Lampasas Leon Limestone Madison McLennan Milam Mills Robertson San Saba Washington |
Atascosa Bandera Bexar Calhoun Comal De Witt Dimmit Edwards Frio Gillespie Goliad Gonzales Guadalupe Jackson Karnes Kendall Kerr Kinney La Salle Lavaca Maverick Medina Real Uvalde Val Verde Victoria Wilson Zavala |
Andrews Borden Coke Concho Crane Crockett Dawson Ector Gaines Glasscock Howard Irion Kimble Loving Martin Mason McCulloch Menard Midland Pecos Reagan Reeves Schleicher Sterling Sutton Terrell Tom Green Upton Ward Winkler |
Brewster Culberson El Paso Hudspeth Jeff Davis Presidio |
Aransas Bee Brooks Cameron Duval Jim Hogg Jim Wells Kenedy Kleberg Live Oak McMullen Nueces Refugio San Patricio Starr Webb Willacy Zapata |
Hidalgo |
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The substate regions defined here were provided by the State's Division of Substance Abuse and Mental Health, Utah Department of Human Services, and are defined in terms of the State's 29 counties. | |||||||
Bear River, Northeastern, Summit, Tooele, and Wasatch | Central, Four Corners, San Juan, and Southwest | Davis County | Salt Lake County |
Utah County | Weber, Morgan | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Note: The substate regions defined for Utah in this table are the same as the substate regions defined in Section D of the Substate Estimates from the 2002-2004 National Surveys on Drug Use and Health. | |||||||
Bear River Box Elder Cache Rich Northeastern Daggett Duchesne Uintah |
Summit Summit Tooele Tooele Wasatch Wasatch |
Central Juab Millard Piute Sanpete Sevier Wayne Four Corners Carbon Emery Grand |
San Juan San Juan Southwest Beaver Garfield Iron Kane Washington |
Davis | Salt Lake | Utah | Morgan Weber |
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The substate regions defined here were determined in consultation with the Vermont Department of Health and are defined in terms of the State's 14 counties. | |||
Champlain Valley | Rural Northeast | Rural Southeast | Rural Southwest |
---|---|---|---|
Note: The substate regions defined for Vermont in this table are the same as the substate regions defined in Section D of the Substate Estimates from the 2002-2004 National Surveys on Drug Use and Health. | |||
Addison Chittenden Franklin Grand Isle |
Caledonia Essex Lamoille Orleans Washington |
Orange Windham Windsor |
Bennington Rutland |
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The substate regions defined here were provided by the Virginia Department of Mental Health, Mental Retardation, and Substance Abuse Services and are defined in terms of the State's 135 counties/independent cities. | ||||
Region 1 | Region 2 | Region 3 | Region 4 | Region 5 |
---|---|---|---|---|
Note: The substate regions defined for Virginia in this table are the same as the substate regions defined in Section D of the Substate Estimates from the 2002-2004 National Surveys on Drug Use and Health. | ||||
Albemarle Augusta Bath Buckingham Buena Vista City Caroline Charlottesville City Clarke Culpeper Fauquier Fluvanna Frederick Fredericksburg City Greene Harrisonburg City Highland King George Lexington City Louisa Madison Nelson Orange Page Rappahannock Rockbridge Rockingham Shenandoah Spotsylvania Stafford Staunton City Warren Waynesboro City Winchester City |
Alexandria City Arlington Fairfax Fairfax City Falls Church City Loudoun Manassas City Manassas Park City Prince William |
Alleghany Amherst Appomattox Bedford Bedford City Bland Botetourt Bristol City Buchanan Campbell Carroll Clifton Forge City Covington City Craig Danville City Dickenson Floyd Franklin Galax City Giles Grayson Henry Lee Lynchburg City Martinsville City Montgomery Norton City Patrick Pittsylvania Pulaski Radford City Roanoke Roanoke City Russell Salem City Scott Smyth Tazewell Washington Wise Wythe |
Amelia Brunswick Charles City Charlotte Chesterfield Colonial Heights City Cumberland Dinwiddie Emporia City Goochland Greensville Halifax Hanover Henrico Hopewell City Lunenburg Mecklenburg New Kent Nottoway Petersburg City Powhatan Prince Edward Prince George Richmond City Surry Sussex |
Accomack Chesapeake City Essex Franklin City Gloucester Hampton City Isle of Wight James City King and Queen King William Lancaster Mathews Middlesex Newport News City Norfolk City Northampton Northumberland Poquoson City Portsmouth City Richmond Southampton Suffolk City Virginia Beach City Westmoreland Williamsburg City York |
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The substate regions defined here were provided by Washington's Division of Alcohol and Substance Abuse, Department of Social and Health Services, and are defined in terms of the State's 39 counties. | |||||
Region 1 | Region 2 | Region 3 | Region 4 (King) | Region 5 | Region 6 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Note: The substate regions defined for Washington in this table are the same as the substate regions defined in Section D of the Substate Estimates from the 2002-2004 National Surveys on Drug Use and Health. | |||||
Adams Chelan Douglas Ferry Grant Lincoln Okanogan Pend Oreille Spokane Stevens Whitman |
Asotin Benton Columbia Franklin Garfield Kittitas Klickitat Walla Walla Yakima |
Island San Juan Skagit Snohomish Whatcom |
King | Kitsap Pierce |
Clallam Clark Cowlitz Grays Harbor Jefferson Lewis Mason Pacific Skamania Thurston Wahkiakum |
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The substate regions defined here were provided by the West Virginia Department of Health and Human Services and are defined in terms of the State's 55 counties. Due to sample size constraints, certain regions were combined to form substate regions. As per the State's request, estimates for eight substate regions along with three aggregate planning areas (Northern, South Central, and Southern) and maps showing all eight regions are being produced. The substate region definitions include nonadjacent counties being combined to form the Southern I and III region. | |||||||
Eastern Highland | Northern | South Central | Southern | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Northern A and B | Northern C and D | South Central I | South Central II | South Central III | Southern I and III | Southern II | |
Note: The substate regions defined for West Virginia in this table are the same as the substate regions defined in Section D of the Substate Estimates from the 2002-2004 National Surveys on Drug Use and Health. | |||||||
Barbour Berkeley Grant Greenbrier Hampshire Hardy Jefferson Mineral Morgan Nicholas Pendleton Pocahontas Randolph Tucker Upshur Webster |
Northern A Brooke Hancock Northern B Marshall Ohio Wetzel |
Northern C Marion Monongalia Preston Taylor Northern D Braxton Doddridge Gilmer Harrison Lewis |
Calhoun Jackson Pleasants Ritchie Roane Tyler Wirt Wood |
Cabell Lincoln Mason Wayne |
Boone Clay Kanawha Putnam |
Southern I Fayette Monroe Raleigh Summers Southern III Logan Mingo |
McDowell Mercer Wyoming |
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The substate regions defined here were provided by the State's Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services, Wisconsin Department of Health and Family Services, and are defined in terms of the State's 72 counties. | |||||
Milwaukee | Northeastern | Northern | Southeastern | Southern | Western |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Note: The substate regions defined for Wisconsin in this table are different from the substate regions defined in Section D of the Substate Estimates from the 2002-2004 National Surveys on Drug Use and Health. However, four regions, Milwaukee, Northeastern, Northern, and Southeastern, are defined consistently across the two sets of region definitions. | |||||
Milwaukee | Brown Calumet Door Fond du Lac Green Lake Kewaunee Manitowoc Marinette Marquette Menominee Oconto Outagamie Shawano Sheboygan Waupaca Waushara Winnebago |
Ashland Bayfield Florence Forest Iron Langlade Lincoln Marathon Oneida Portage Price Sawyer Taylor Vilas Wood |
Jefferson Kenosha Ozaukee Racine Walworth Washington Waukesha |
Adams Columbia Crawford Dane Dodge Grant Green Iowa Juneau Lafayette Richland Rock Sauk Vernon |
Barron Buffalo Burnett Chippewa Clark Douglas Dunn Eau Claire Jackson La Crosse Monroe Pepin Pierce Polk Rusk St. Croix Trempealeau Washburn |
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The substate regions defined here were provided by the Substance Abuse Division, Wyoming Department of Health, and are defined in terms of the State's 23 counties. | ||||||||
Judicial District 1 (Laramie) | Judicial District 2 | Judicial District 3 | Judicial District 4 | Judicial District 5 | Judicial District 6 | Judicial District 7 (Natrona) | Judicial District 8 | Judicial District 9 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Note: The substate regions defined for Wyoming in this table are the same as the substate regions defined in Section D of the Substate Estimates from the 2002-2004 National Surveys on Drug Use and Health. | ||||||||
Laramie | Albany Carbon |
Lincoln Sweetwater Uinta |
Johnson Sheridan |
Big Horn Hot Springs Park Washakie |
Campbell Crook Weston |
Natrona | Converse Goshen Niobrara Platte |
Fremont Sublette Teton |
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