Drug Addiction Treatment

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Drug Addiction Treatment in Arizona

Signs of Addiction

Many Arizonans struggle with drug addiction, but often they don’t realize they need help. If you use drugs and are not sure if your use has become an addiction, here are some warning signs to look out for: 

  • Physical Illness: If you feel sick when you stop using the substance, you may have an addiction. 
  • Increase in Use: If you take drugs more often, or use more each time to reach the same high, it is a sign that you may have an addiction. 
  • Unusual Behavior: Some addicts hide their drug abuse from family and friends. This is a sign that you’re using too much. If you seek more privacy or avoid social interactions when high, you may be hiding your substance abuse.  
  • Avoiding Obligations: If you are so consumed with your drug of choice that it has become your top priority, you may be addicted. If you have skipped work or bailed on friends or family to take drugs, this also indicates a serious issue.  

Finding Help Can Be Hard

Some addicts would rather continue their painful struggle than admit they have a problem. Here are six of the top reasons that substance abusers avoid finding help:

1. They aren’t ready to stop using.
2. They have no desire to stop use or they enjoy it too much.
3. They don’t have health insurance and assume they can’t afford it.
4. They aren’t aware of state programs offered for substance abuse treatment, or that they can find help for free or at a low cost.
5. They are concerned about the effect that enrolling in treatment may have on their jobs, family or personal relationships.
6. They lack the faith in themselves to overcome substance abuse addiction.

Drug Treatment That Works

When a substance abuser completes detox treatment, the next step is to enter rehab. Rehab facilities offer a variety of therapy plans, but the most effective is inpatient treatment.

Inpatient treatment is medically managed care that takes place in a live-in facility under 24-hour supervision. It tends to be more expensive than other methods, but is highly effective in helping the addict adjust to life without drugs.
Outpatient treatment is for people who can’t enroll full-time, or those who can’t afford inpatient services. Experts recommend it for non-chronic substance abusers, or for those who have already completed inpatient treatment. This type of care allows patients to spend their days in a rehab center and return home at night and on weekends.
Residential treatment is a blend of both inpatient and outpatient care. Individuals work on their recovery in a comfortable residential facility that allows them to spend time relearning life skills.
Doctor-helping-patient

Therapy for Addiction Treatment

Cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) focuses on helping addicts understand the effect of their disease, both on themselves and on those around them. It also teaches coping skills and enables recovering addicts to manage future situations that might otherwise lead to relapse.

In addition to one-on-one sessions with a therapist, most recovering individuals benefit from therapy in a group setting. Group therapy is interactive and allows patients to share their experiences and offer mutual support toward healing.

Family therapy, meanwhile, focuses on mending damaged relationships. It can help addicts regain the trust of their families, but also encourages all family members to develop communication skills that will allow them to better support one another.

Additional types of therapy include equine, art, music and yoga. All have proven cathartic and beneficial for many troubled people including addicts.

If you are fighting an addiction to drugs or alcohol and have questions or need help, please call us at 623-263-7371. Act today and get the help you need!