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Resources include the following treatment categories :

Drug Abuse Treatment

Drug abuse treatment is an important part of recovering from drug abuse. In addition to stopping drug use, the goal of drug abuse treatment is to return the individual to productive functioning in the family, workplace, and community. While in drug abuse treatment, recovering drug addicts learn about addiction, recovery and relapse while addressing misguided beliefs about self, others and their environment. Attending a drug abuse treatment program helps the recovering drug abuser make lifestyle changes, manage feelings and develop coping tools and drug refusal skills. In addition, they learn to identify relapse warning signs and challenge thoughts that may lead to relapse.

Keep in mind, no single drug abuse treatment program is appropriate for all individuals. Matching drug abuse treatment settings and services to each individual's particular problems and needs is critical to his or her ultimate success in returning to productive functioning in the family, workplace, and society. If you or someone you care about is caught in the trap of drug abuse, then drug abuse treatment may be necessary in salvaging their life.

Drug Treatment

Drug treatment is a way for individuals with addiction problems to learn valuable tools and information to help them recover. There are many different types of drug treatment available such as counseling, psychotherapy, support groups, family therapy, and in-patient or out-patient programs.

Generally, the more drug treatment an individual receives the better the outcome. Those who stay in drug treatment longer than three months usually have better outcomes than those who stay less time. Over the last 15 years, studies have shown that drug treatment works to reduce an individual's drug use and the crimes committed by drug addicted individuals. Research has also shown that those who have successfully completed a drug treatment program are more likely to be employed.

Alcohol Abuse Treatment

Alcohol abuse treatment works with the entire person to improve self-esteem and self-worth, heal core traumas, learn life-skills, gain control over addictive patterns, improve the health of the body, in addition to recovering from alcohol abuse. Treatment focuses on helping each person to rebalance their lives and gain the skills they need to live a successful, satisfying life, free from alcohol abuse. Those who attend treatment find that they have more skills and confidence in creating the lives they want, complete with good relationships, a satisfying job or career, and enjoyment of day to day life.

A vast majority of those who abuse alcohol have self-esteem issues and feel powerless in the face of beating their alcohol abuse problem. Alcohol abuse treatment focuses on building self-esteem and helping people begin to feel their own self-worth again. This in turn builds their confidence and their ability to create the lives they want. With a sense of powerfulness and self-worth, people are in a better place to say "no" to unhealthy, addictive behaviors and to say "yes" to the healthy choices that make life worth living. In addition, people gain skill at recognizing the addictive "part" of themselves and at diffusing its power.

Counseling

Counseling focuses on the symptoms of drug addiction, the individual as a whole, and the content and structure of the individual's recovery program. It gives the person coping strategies and tools for recovery. The primary goal of counseling is to assist the individual in achieving and maintaining abstinence from drugs and alcohol. The secondary goal is the help them recover from the damage addiction has caused in their life.

Counseling works by first helping the individual recognize the existence of a problem and the associated irrational thinking that comes along with drug addiction. Next, the person is encouraged to achieve and maintain abstinence and then to develop the necessary psychosocial skills to continue their recovery. In counseling, it is the individual who must take responsibility fro working on and succeeding with a program of recovery.

Drug Detox

The goal of drug detox is to rid the body of toxins accumulated by drug use. The first step of detox is drug withdrawal. Drug withdrawal is "the act or process of ceasing to use an addictive drug." Once an individual has discontinued using drugs physical and behavioral withdrawal symptoms may follow. Drug detox is a process that helps diminish the uncomfortable symptoms of drug withdrawal.

Drug detox is performed in many different ways depending on where you decide to receive treatment. Most drug detox centers simply provide treatment to avoid physical withdrawal to alcohol & other drugs. A quality drug detox program will not only to provide the individual with counseling during detox but help with the physical withdrawal and the psychological root cause of the individual's addiction problem, so as to decrease the chances of relapse.

Drug detox can be viewed in three separate stages:
  1. Medical Detox: A medical doctor will need to supervise your medical withdrawal from drugs, ensuring you complete this phase safely and with minimal complications. Medical detox can take several days.
  2. Physical Detox: Once your body is no longer dependent on drugs, you will need to work on building up your physical health. A nutritionist can be helpful during this phase, enabling you to develop a balanced diet to help you through the rest of the drug detox process.
  3. Emotional Detox: Detox can be extremely difficult on your emotional health, which is why most treatment centers offer counseling during detox. Because drugs have become an integral part of your mental, emotional and social life, you will need emotional help as you detox.
Meetings

Meetings can complement and extend the effects of professional drug addiction treatment. The most prominent meetings for those recovering from drug addiction are those affiliated with Alcoholics Anonymous, Narcotics Anonymous, and Cocaine Anonymous, all of which are based on the 12-step model. There are other groups who provide meetings such as Smart Recovery and others not based on the 12 steps. Most drug addiction treatment programs encourage patients to participate in meetings to solidify the recovery process during and after formal treatment.

Meetings many times are free of charge, self-governing and self-supporting. Information regarding day, time, and locations of meetings held by 12-Step organizations can be found by calling a central group telephone number in the yellow pages under "Alcoholism" and "Drug Abuse and Addiction". Typically meetings are held one or more times a week, at the same location and at the same time. Meetings focus on members sharing with other members their experience, strength, and hope in terms of recovery from alcoholism and drug addiction.