21 hours ago recover at home with low cost options. We accept most private health insurance. If you’re unsure about coverage, reach out and we’ll help you figure it out. In addition to professional treatment, we offer workshops and support group meetings that are … >> Go To The Portal
recover at home with low cost options. We accept most private health insurance. If you’re unsure about coverage, reach out and we’ll help you figure it out. In addition to professional treatment, we offer workshops and support group meetings that are …
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*If this is a life-threatening emergency, please call 911 or the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline at 800.273.8255.
It is classified as a "brief intervention" because the average length of treatment is several weeks , followed by aftercare.
The main difference between an OP program and an intensive outpatient program (IOP) is the amount of time spent in treatment and level of care needed. Outpatient treatment programs are often referred to as a “step down” from IOP, while still attending weekly meetings and participating in therapy groups. Learn more about IOP.
Our therapists use a wide variety of treatment approaches, including dialectical behavioral therapy (DBT) and cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT). These approaches are often used in therapy to improve mental health, making it beneficial for those who are also struggling with substance abuse.
When a person discovers that use of a substance can serve as a coping mechanism for a psychological deficit, for example, social anxiety or difficulty confronting problems, real substance abuse begins. Once a “drug of choice” has been identified, this drug’s benefit as a coping mechanism promotes its regular use.
The “continuum of care” in drug addiction treatment spans the most intense levels of care through post-treatment recovery support. Ideally, clients progress from higher levels of care to lower levels, however, depending on a client’s success at a particular level, the counselor might recommend a higher level of care.
Despite all this, only 11% of people who struggle with drugs and alcohol get the help they need. But there is hope. 24 million Americans are currently in recovery, living their lives without dependence on drugs or alcohol after struggling with addiction.
Without treatment or engagement in recovery activities, addiction is progressive and can result in disability or premature death. Two out of three people who struggle with addiction also have co-occurring mental health illnesses which can include PTSD, depressive disorders, anxiety, and/or obsessive-compulsive disorders.
Mutual support groups are led by peers - people in recovery from all walks of life. They are typically (but not always) spiritually-based, and they focus on the group, the community.
Mutual support groups, like Alcoholics Anonymous (AA), play a critical role in recovery, but they themselves are not substance abuse treatment as it is currently defined. Treatment is provided by healthcare professionals, is “evidence-based” psychological therapy (like Cognitive Behavioral Therapy - CBT), and focuses on the individual with in-depth assessments and treatment plans that are customized each individual client. Treatment is “inside-out”, focused first on changing thinking patterns, so that changed behavior can follow.
Treatment is an accelerator of recovery that helps a person struggling with addiction to understand what addiction is, from its biomedical aspects to its social aspects, and what is driving the addiction.