What To Expect From Inpatient Treatment

What To Expect From Inpatient Treatment

Entering an inpatient treatment center can be a scary proposition for those with a substance abuse problem. With the first-time client in mind, we’ve compiled a short list of ‘What To Expect From Inpatient Treatment.’

Not only are they going to have to give up their drug of choice, but they’re going to have to meet new people, and share things with those people, that they may have never told anyone. Add all this to being away from home and sleeping in a new place, and it’s not hard to see why taking the first step to go to an inpatient treatment center is often the hardest step.

What To Expect From Inpatient Treatment:

First Thing’s First, The Addiction Treatment Assessment

Most often, after you are assigned a room and get a tour of the facility, you will undergo an assessment with one of the lead staff members. This is meant to help the physicians, and other staff members understand why you are there, what kind of physiological effects you may have due to withdrawals, and to let you know that everything possible is going to be done to make sure you receive the best care possible. 

Custom Drug or Alcohol Treatment Plan

Depending on the patient, this is typically where a rehab center and the team will establish a care plan for you which may include any combination of the following:

• Disease Concept
• Family Skills
• Stress Management
• Anger Management
• Communication
• Self-Care

Indeed, the care plan isn’t beholden just to these types of therapies and only the responsible staff can determine what is right for each patient. One of the significant benefits of checking into an inpatient treatment center is that the team can observe the patient 24/7 and adjust the needed care accordingly, and this is important because often time addiction comes with co-occurring psychological disorders. It’s this attention to the whole mental makeup of the individual that makes facilities like inpatient treatment centers different from other conventional rehabilitation programs. Here are some other things that make the list of what to expect from inpatient treatment.

12 Step Programs in Residential Treatment

It’s also possible that the patient may undergo some 12-step program where they can build a network of people made up of other addicts. This network can help them through the therapeutic process and form a sense of community that offers real-world support. It’s one thing to have doctors and therapists tell you that something is wrong. But it’s another thing to have your peers express their anxieties and fears to you, and for you to share those same things with them.

A Holistic Addiction Treatment Approach

Perhaps the most significant benefit to being at an inpatient treatment center – apart from not being able to get drugs or alcohol – is the holistic approach to healing the patient. The physical, spiritual, and mental components of the person are taken into account as a whole, and the patient is treated with a combination of approaches that addresses these three interlinked facets of a human’s personality and being.

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