Welcome to Drug and Alcohol Treatment
| ||
Alcohol Treatment Myths Article
![]()
This is a selection made from among articles on Alcohol Treatment Myths. For a permanent link to this article, or to bookmark it for future reading, click here.
The Straight Scoop About Drug Rehab Programs
from: Alcohol abuse and drug abuse are reaching all time highs in this nation. Many people do not even realize or acknowledge that they are an addict. The term "addict" conjures up images of someone who has reached the bottom of the barrel and is not a pleasant picture, yet many of the alcohol abusers and drug abusers are at that place, or if their affliction is left untreated, will soon find themselves in that place. Many of these people take the position that "that could not happen to me" but it can and it will if they do not seek help before the situation gets totally out of control.Drug abuse is rampant and at the same time, it is probably the more difficult of the two addictions to convince someone of or make them aware of. Drug abuse is not limited to the illegal drugs like crack or heroin or cocaine. While these can indeed be considered addictive drugs that can represent a drug abuse problem, drug addiction can also occur accidentally via legally prescribed pharmacy drugs. These are drugs that have been prescribed by a real doctor to treat a condition or a pain, but the user keeps on taking them long after the original cause has gone away, because they have become addictive. There is really very little difference between these two types of drug addicts, since an addiction is an addiction.
The most difficult task in getting someone into a drug rehab program is to convince them that they are indeed a drug addict. Most people, especially if the addiction is due to legal prescription medication, are unwilling to accept the label of "drug addict", and many have even convinced themselves that they can quit any time they want to, they just have not had an occasion to "want to" yet. This is a potentially dangerous situation, and can only get worse over time.
Almost all drug rehab programs have the detox phase. In this phase, the addict's body is detoxified, or in other words, the drug is no longer given and the person may even go through withdrawal symptoms. Depending on the particular drug that the person was addicted to, this is determined to either be cold turkey, or it can be with gradually reduced doses to avoid severe withdrawal symptoms. The important point is that the person's body is given less and less of the drug to where they begin to live normally and realize that they can live without the drug.
Withdrawal symptoms are real and should not be minimized. When the body has become used to a particular chemical substance being in the body and that substance is suddenly or even gradually taken away, the body reacts, sometimes severely. Some people think that withdrawal symptoms are all in the mind, but you need to know that withdrawal symptoms are indeed real and can be very painful for the person going through it.
If someone you love is addicted to drugs or alcohol, the best thing you can do for them is to get them into an alcohol rehab program or drug rehab program. The programs are very good and are usually at minimal or even no cost. At least have that person agree to talk with a counselor about it. This is certainly a preferable option to watching them destroy their lives bit by bit over time.
About Author
Jon maintains a variety of web sites and shares his expertise. Need more information about Drug Rehab Programs? Visit our web site for more information, http://www.rehab-alcohol-drug.com
Source: ArticleTrader.com
Alcohol Treatment Myths Specific links
Alcohol Treatment Myths News
Maine’s poor take to stage in Bangor to dispel myths
Loren, a retired state employee from Surry, talks about the difficulties of obtaining prescription medication for his wife during Wednesday night's Faces of the Poor presentation at Husson University in Bangor on May 23, 2012.
Read more...Maine’s poor take to stage in Bangor in effort to dispel myths
Loren, a retired state employee from Surry, talks about the difficulties of obtaining prescription medication for his wife during Wednesday night's Faces of the Poor presentation at Husson University in Bangor on May 23, 2012.
Read more...Carroll: Drug war myths cut both ways
Those of us who believe the war on drugs has been a failure — even a fiasco — shouldn't have to invent or exaggerate reasons for idling it down.
Read more...Colorado West is largest behavioral health services provider in northwestern Colorado
Colorado West Regional Mental Health staffers include from left, front row, Erin Williams, Hanya Gottardo, Jenna Bennett and Janice Irby. Back row, Jackie Skramstad, Barbara Hauptli, Kathryn Fitzgerald, Lois Menke-Cashman, Stephanie Maxfield, Raelynn Pedersen and Lisa Hutchinson.
Read more...Stefan Heeke: How Personal Analytics Can Help Debunk Popular Myths
I started analyzing personal information, maintaining a diary of numbers until I had sufficient data to run a statistical calculation on my personal well-being. Which activities correlate with a good day? Which decisions best advance long term goals? What works, what doesn't?
Read more...Victims coming forward more often
CORNWALL — Over the past 19 years, Sarah Kaplan has seen the perception of, treatment of and awareness of sexual assault change — slowly — but she is looking for more. The Assault and Sexual Abuse Program at the Cornwall Community Hospital is in its 20th year.[...]
Read more...The Mount Sinai Hospital Experts Debunk the 5 Most Common Postpartum Depression Myths Plaguing Latina Moms
NEW YORK, May 2, 2012 /PRNewswire/ -- According to a recent study, more than 30% of Latinas in the U.S. and Mexico suffer perinatal or postpartum depression, making it the number one complication of pregnancy among Latinas. In an effort to raise visibility for a disease that is...
Read more...Suicide Prevention Conference to feature top flight professional presentations
POLSON — The KwaTaqNuk Resort will be the site of the Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes Circle of Trust Suicide Prevention Conference slated for Thursday, May 24 and Friday, May 25, from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. each day.
Read more...The right way to remove ticks from pets
This summer is expected to be a bad tick season. Burning one with a match or freezing it off are not safe removal techniques. Use these foolproof methods instead.
Read more...Man in intensive care after taking drugs
A man is in intensive care after taking cocaine.
Read more...

