Should I Attend a Long-term or Short-term Rehab Program?
Choosing an addiction treatment program can be a difficult process, especially when there are so many different types of centers and programs available. Because time spent in treatment is usually very important to most recovering addicts, you may be wondering if you should attend a long-term or short-term rehab program. It is important to assess your needs and to see how a certain length of time can meet them.
Featured Rehab Center
General Program Lengths and Rehab Types
According to the National Institute on Drug Abuse, “Treatment approaches and individual programs continue to evolve and diversify, and many programs today do not fit neatly into traditional drug addiction treatment classifications.” However, there are some general rules of thumb that most usually abide by.
Treatment must last at least 90 days for maximum effectiveness, and programs that last longer are usually even more effective.
Residential and outpatient programs both have short- and long-term versions of treatment, so you will not need to sacrifice one type of care for the other.
Most start with detoxification or stabilization and then move on to addiction treatment in the form of therapy, medication, and other methods.
Treatment plans can be adjusted to the individual patient’s needs and how these may change throughout recovery.
Go over your situation and drug use history to decide how long you should attend rehab.
If the treatment length you choose winds up being less beneficial to you than previously predicted, you can always discuss a change in your program with your doctor.
Short-Term or Long-Term: Which Should I Choose?
Every individual is different, and “no single treatment is right for everyone” (NIDA). But you can begin to look at your own situation and your needs and decide which rehab option is best for you. For example, if you are:
A long-time drug abuser
A polydrug abuser
Someone who struggles with change
Someone who’s attempted rehab many times in the past
Dealing with a comorbid mental or physical disorder
you may need treatment that lasts longer and provides you with the time you need to truly recover. It is most important, though, to consider what would be best for you and to work toward finding a program that provides what you need. If you have more questions about rehab or the difference between long- and short-term programs, call 888-646-0635Who Answers? today.
Alcohol addiction is a chronic disease that can creep up on a person and end up destroying their life if they do not get help. Alcohol addiction will cause a person to have uncontrollable urges to abuse alcohol, and every time a person abuses alcohol they cause damage to their body. According to the National….
Getting the essential level of care to achieve long-term recovery is important and it means more than simply gaining abstinence when one has a substance dependency. Although your primary focus may be on ending or significantly reducing substance abuse, the associated problems also must be addressed in order to help you maintain abstinence and avert….
Suicide & Mental Illness More oftentimes than not, someone who’s considering suicide is dealing with overwhelming emotional and/or psychological problems. According to the American Family Physician, over 90 percent of people who commit suicide struggle with one or more psychiatric disorders, including substance abuse. In effect, it’s not the psychological dysfunction that increases suicide risk,….
Drug and alcohol rehab programs can differ in many ways and at the same time, your needs, goals, and circumstances will be different, too. No single program or approach has been proven better than the rest for everyone, but, by considering those things that are most important to you, you will be able to choose….
So. Here you are- You with the addiction to cocaine; You with the addiction to meth; You with the addiction to opiates. You have found yourself right smack in the middle of a raging addiction that you have no control over. You feel helpless and scared. You want to get help for your addiction but….
Cocaine abuse rapidly turns to addiction, and without the help of a professional treatment program, it is almost impossible to put a stop to one’s dangerous abuse of this substance. Call now to find rehab programs that offer safe, reliable treatment for cocaine addiction. Is Professional Treatment Necessary for Cocaine Addiction? Cocaine is one of….
Bath salts have become the newest family of drugs to hit the market. Classified as both “legal” and “illegal”, access to bath salts only requires users to know where to go to get them. As with any substance of abuse, bath salt addiction rates continue to rise as more and more people are exposed. As….
According to the National Institute on Drug Abuse, treatment needs to be personalized in order for it to work. Each drug acts differently and each person with an addiction is an individual. With hundreds of drug addictions and dual diagnosis combinations it is important to find the treatment center that works with your individual addiction…..
Most everyone has his or her own quirks and idiosyncrasies. Throughout the course of the day, these “unique qualities” may have little to no effect on a person’s ability to function effectively. In cases where these qualities start to affect one’s quality of life, the seeds of mental illness may be at work. Mental health….
Eating Disorders and the Brain Eating disorders are extremely problematic to an individual and their family, especially when treatment is not received in time. Eating disorders normally stem from a person’s poor and distorted body image of their self. For example, people with anorexia typically believe they are overweight and need to lose weight, even….
Calls to numbers on a specific treatment center listing will be routed to that treatment center. Calls to any general helpline will be answered or returned by one of the treatment providers listed, each of which is a paid advertiser that includes Right Path Rehab.
By calling the helpline you agree to the terms of use. We do not receive any commission or fee that is dependent upon which treatment provider a caller chooses. There is no obligation to enter treatment.