Treatment Options

Treatment Options

Addiction Treatment

When you realize the negative effects addiction of any kind has on your life, you may seek treatment services for yourself or an addicted loved one. Consent is an important factor in seeking treatment for an addicted person. If you’re a concerned loved one seeking treatment for an addicted person, you cannot force them to undergo drug rehab or alcohol rehab.


If you’re addicted to a substance, you may decide to seek treatment after an intervention. These processes may involve your family and loved ones coming together to help you realize how your addiction has negatively affected them. It may come across as ganging up on you, but interventions come from a place of concern, and the people who organized the intervention usually present options for you to move forward.


Once you agree to take the steps to get better, there are several addiction recovery treatment services you may undergo. Regardless of the substance addiction you will recover from, addiction treatment services usually involve 12-step programs to help you avoid drugs and alcohol.


The main goal of these programs is to maintain abstinence from the substance you abuse. Successful treatments are ongoing procedures and essentially help you rejoin the community as a functional member of society. Here are some addiction treatment services that aim to change lives for the better.

Medication-Assisted Treatment (MAT)

This treatment service approaches addiction recovery by controlling your unhealthy cravings for drugs and alcohol through medicines. When you are addicted to any substance, your body will call for more of that substance because you have become dependent on the false happiness they provide.

Day Intensive Outpatient Program (DIOP)

Day intensive outpatient programs are specialized treatment programs designed to prepare a patient for the real world once they recover from their addiction. Such programs will include exposure to a transitional housing community, exercises to build new relationships, and getting employed after recovery.

Intensive Outpatient Program (IOP)

An intensive outpatient program involves a weekly three-day program for 16 weeks. Clients would attend three-hour courses for the entire time they check into an IOP. These courses will include tools and exercises that an addicted patient needs to recover from their substance abuse.

Outpatient Program (OP)

A standard outpatient program is ideal for a recovering addict who is only beginning their journey to sobriety. If you have recognized the impact your substance abuse has on yourself, your family, and your community, an OP may provide the necessary first steps to addiction recovery.

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