Drug
Rehab Need Facts
6.1 million in 2001 was the estimated number of
persons age 12 or older needing addiction treatment or drug rehab for an
illicit drug problem.
An estimated 16.6 million persons age 12
or older were classified with drug addiction to or abuse of illicit drugs
and/or alcoholism or alcohol addiction in 2001 and should seek recovery
resources immediately.
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An estimated 5.0 million people was the overall number of persons
needing but not receiving treatment in 2001.
Do you know one of
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Drug rehab programs are of the utmost importance to the nation and addiction
treatment for alcoholism and drug addiction requires every resource we can
muster. The abuse of illicit drugs such as cocaine, methamphetamine, marijuana,
heroin, and MDMA as well as diverted pharmaceuticals inflicts tremendous damage
on society, particularly on the millions of families that have a member
struggling with illicit drug dependence or addiction.
According to
Department of Health and Human Services data, nearly 35 million persons aged 12
or older used an illicit drug within the past year, and approximately 3.8
million were dependent on or abusers of illicit drugs in 2003 again reminding
use firmly that drug rehab centers are needed desperately. Health and Human
Services data also show that the number of drug treatment admissions to
publicly funded addiction treatment facilities in 2002 reached their highest
recorded level at nearly 1.1 million. The public resources consumed in
addressing illicit drug trafficking and abuse are substantial. In 2003 nearly
$11.4 billion was allocated by the federal government for drug education,
incarceration, intelligence, interdiction, and addiction treatment including
drug rehab programs.
Although budgets National Drug Intelligence Center vary
greatly at the state and local levels, many state governments and local
municipalities commit significant portions of their annual budgets to counter
drug programs. For example, the budgets of California and New York combined
commit nearly $1.1 billion annually to alcohol and substance abuse addiction
treatment and prevention programs. Cities and towns across the country face
multifaceted challenges such as high levels of drug distribution to and from
their areas, high levels of local drug consumption, widespread drug-related
violence and property crime, widespread drug production, and myriad other
attendant issues such as drug-related child endangerment or neglect,
environmental damage, and money laundering. In many areas, however, the
principal concern of communities with respect to drug trafficking is the
transportation of large quantities of illicit drugs to their areas. Regardless
of a citys location or the leading drug-related concerns in a particular
area, virtually all communities in the country are adversely affected by the
flow of illegal drugs from foreign source areas into the United States,
particularly via the Southwest Border.
We need drug rehab facilities
now and in volume. Cocaine drug rehab needed. Interagency estimates indicate
that worldwide cocaine production has decreased sharply and that cocaine
seizures have increased sharply since 2001; however, such trends have not yet
resulted in decreased availability of the drug in domestic drug markets and
therefore drug rehab facilities to handle those addicted are desperately
needed. Since 1999, rates of use for cocaine have trended downward overall
among adolescents, have increased overall among college students, and have
fluctuated among young adults. Nevertheless, demand for the drug remains higher
than for all other illicit drugs except marijuana.
Methamphetamine drug
rehab is equally needed nation wide. According to law enforcement reporting and
statistical drug availability indicators, methamphetamine availability
increased over the past year, most notably in the Northeast Region but drug
rehab centers cannot keep up with the pace. The increase in availability
nationwide appears to be fueled primarily by increased production of both
powder and ice methamphetamine in Mexico. Despite increased availability,
however, rates of past year use for powder methamphetamine appear to have
trended downward overall since 1999 for all age groups still leaving a huge
nation wide methamphetamine addiction problem requiring drug rehab facilities
to handle them.
Marijuana addiction treatment is sorely needed.
Marijuana is readily available throughout the country, and higher potency
marijuana became more prevalent over the period 1994 through 2002 requiring
drug rehab facilities to expand. Domestic marijuana production appears to be
increasing in part because of large-scale marijuana production by U.S.-based
Mexican criminal groups within the United States. Despite rising marijuana
production and already wide availability of the drug, rates of past year use
for marijuana have trended downward among most age groupsparticularly
adolescentssince the late 1990s.
Heroin addiction drug rehab
programs a must. Significant increases in potential worldwide heroin production
in 2002, 2003, and 2004 do not appear to have affected the overall availability
of the drug in the United States and the need for drug rehab and addiction
treatment. Law enforcement reporting as well as statistical data indicate that
heroin availability is stable overall and that South American and Mexican
heroin remain the most prevalent types, although the overall market share of
Southwest Asian heroin may be increasing in the United States relative to other
heroin types. Rates of past year use for heroin appear to be relatively stable.
MDMA (Ecstasy) addiction drug rehab needs. The availability of MDMA has
decreased significantly nationwide. Moreover, national-level drug demand data
show that rates of past year use for MDMA peaked for most age groups in 2001
and have declined significantly since but drug rehab need is still very clear.
There is no indication that foreign production has increased over the past
year, and domestic production of MDMA remains very limited.
Pharmaceuticals addiction and drastic addiction treatment measures
needed. The availability of pharmaceuticals has increased since the late 1990s
when legitimate commercial production and disbursals of many pharmaceuticals,
particularly prescription narcotics, increased sharply, making more of the
drugs available for illegal diversion creating a most desperate need for drug
rehab centers and staff to handle this epidemic. Most pharmaceuticals abused in
the United States are illegally diverted through forged prescriptions, doctor
shopping, and theft; however, law enforcement agencies report that illegal
diversion of prescription drugs via the Internet, often through Internet-based
pharmacies, has increased sharply since the mid- to late 1990s. Rates of abuse
for prescription drugs appear be stabilizing at high levels after increasing
sharply since the early to mid-1990s.
Other Dangerous Drugs. The
trafficking and abuse of other dangerous drugs such as GHB, ketamine, LSD, and
PCP pose a moderate threat to the country. GHB has become a particular concern
to law enforcement and public health agencies because of increasing
availability of the drug, sharp increases in GHB-related emergency department
mentions since the mid-1990s, and the use of GHB in the commission of
drug-facilitated sexual assault. Ketamine also is used in the commission of
drug-facilitated sexual assault; however, rates of past year use for ketamine
are trending downward among adolescents and young adults, as are emergency
department mentions for the drug. Law enforcement reporting as well as
statistical data indicate that LSD availability is decreasing and that rates of
past year use for LSD have decreased sharply to very low levels. PCP
availability is limited primarily to metropolitan areas, and rates of past year
use for the drug have decreased to very low levels since 2000.
Drug and Alcohol Rehabilitation
Need: As the numbers above from the 2001 National Household Survey
on Drug Abuse indicate there is no way to measure the actual magnitude of human
suffering and familial devastation caused each year by the overwhelm of finding
and utilizing a quality drug rehab program or alcoholism treatment program.
Drugs like cocaine, heroin, methamphetamine, alcohol and a variety of
prescription drugs threaten every aspect of our existence and for those
unfortunate individuals who have become addicted and their respective loved
ones the nightmare continues until real sobriety is achieved. This is where our
service is crucial.
Drug and Alcohol Addiction Treatment
Types: There are thousands of drug and alcohol addiction treatment
centers in the U.S. alone. Even though they are all attempting to assist
individuals battle to over come addiction, their methods are often very
different.
There are many different treatment approaches utilized throughout the
United States and other countries. Some of the main stream philosophies about
addiction today are:
- 12 Step Addiction Treatment where in a person attends an
addiction treatment program which utilizes the basic philosophical approach of
alcoholics anonymous, AA, NA or otherwise known as the 12 steps.
- The Medical Model of Addiction
Treatment where in the
theory is that all addiction is an incurable disease and therefore requires
addiction treatment including drug therapy as well as counseling etc.
- Drug Treatment instead of Drug Rehab
Programs for opiate
addicts usually are conducted in outpatient treatment settings, often called
methadone treatment programs. These programs use a long-acting synthetic opiate
medication, usually methadone or LAAM, administered orally for a sustained
period at a dosage sufficient to prevent opiate withdrawal, block the effects
of illicit opiate use, and decrease opiate craving. Patients stabilized on
adequate, sustained dosages of methadone or LAAM can function normally. Drug
therapy type of addiction treatment is often found to be less than beneficial
due to the fact that the individual remains on drugs, albeit legally prescribed
drugs, nonetheless drugs. The person also needs to handle the many aspects of
addiction such as guilt, shame and other key emotional factors, non of which
can be handled with drug therapy.
- Bio-Physical Addiction Treatment or
Drug Rehab is a process
whereby individuals are cleansed of the toxins left behind after drug use so as
to prevent these toxins from causing the person to crave drugs and alcohol in
the future. This addiction treatment component is a natural, or non-drug
methodology which , when combined with life skills improvement and intensive
specialized counseling has become widely accepted as the desired drug rehab
methodology or addiction treatment approach primarily due to it's achievement
of very high success rates where applied.
- Outpatient Drug-Free Drug
Rehab where in the
person undergoes addiction treatment at an outpatient facility but returns home
each day to carry on with their life routines. Such treatment costs less than
residential or inpatient treatment and often is more suitable for individuals
who are employed or who have extensive social supports. Low-intensity programs
may offer little more than drug education and admonition. Other outpatient
models, such as intensive day treatment, can be comparable to residential
programs in services and effectiveness, depending on the individual patient's
characteristics and needs.
- Short-Term Residential Drug Rehab
Programs provide
intensive but relatively brief residential addiction treatment based on a
modified 12-step approach. These programs were originally designed to treat
alcohol problems, but during the cocaine epidemic of the mid-1980's, many began
to treat illicit drug abuse and addiction. The original residential treatment
model consisted of a 3 to 6 week hospital-based inpatient treatment phase
followed by extended outpatient therapy and participation in a self-help group,
such as Alcoholics Anonymous. Reduced health care coverage for substance abuse
treatment has resulted in a diminished number of these programs, and the
average length of stay under managed care review is much shorter than in early
programs.
- Medical Detoxification is a process whereby individuals
are systematically withdrawn from addicting drugs in an inpatient or outpatient
setting, typically under the care of a physician. Detoxification is sometimes
called a distinct treatment modality but is more appropriately considered a
precursor of treatment, because it is designed to treat the acute physiological
effects of stopping drug use. Medications are available for detoxification from
opiates, nicotine, benzodiazepines, alcohol, barbiturates, and other sedatives.
In some cases, particularly for the last three types of drugs, detoxification
may be a medical necessity, and untreated withdrawal may be medically dangerous
or even fatal. Detoxification is not designed to address the psychological,
social, and behavioral problems associated with addiction and therefore does
not typically produce lasting behavioral changes necessary for recovery.
Detoxification is most useful when it incorporates formal processes of
assessment and referral to subsequent drug addiction treatment.
- Rapid Opiate Detox is a process whereby individuals
are chemically withdrawn from, usually opiate type drugs whereby the person's
body is put through the withdrawal process very quickly , hence Rapid Opiate
Detox, while the individual has been anesthetizes and put to sleep. This form
of withdraw is expensive and very dangerous but the allure is due to the quick
"painless" withdrawal achieved versus what most consider to be long painful
withdrawal through traditional means of "coming off of drugs" during Detox.
- Treating Criminal Justice-Involved
Drug Abusers and Addicts Research has shown that combining criminal justice sanctions with drug
treatment can be effective in decreasing drug use and related crime.
Individuals under legal coercion tend to stay in treatment for a longer period
of time and do as well as or better than others not under legal pressure.
Often, drug abusers come into contact with the criminal justice system earlier
than other health or social systems, and intervention by the criminal justice
system to engage the individual in treatment may help interrupt and shorten a
career of drug use. Treatment for the criminal justice-involved drug abuser or
drug addict may be delivered prior to, during, after, or in lieu of
incarceration.
- Community-Based Treatment for
Criminal Justice Populations A number of criminal justice alternatives to incarceration have been
tried with offenders who have drug disorders, including limited diversion
programs, pretrial release conditional on entry into treatment, and conditional
probation with sanctions. The drug court is a promising approach. Drug courts
mandate and arrange for drug addiction treatment, actively monitor progress in
treatment, and arrange for other services to drug-involved offenders. Federal
support for planning, implementation, and enhancement of drug courts is
provided under the U.S. Department of Justice Drug Courts Program Office. As a
well-studied example, the Treatment Accountability and Safer Communities (TASC)
program provides an alternative to incarceration by addressing the multiple
needs of drug-addicted offenders in a community-based setting. TASC programs
typically include counseling, medical care, parenting instruction, family
counseling, school and job training, and legal and employment services. The key
features of TASC include (1) coordination of criminal justice and drug
treatment; (2) early identification, assessment, and referral of drug-involved
offenders; (3) monitoring offenders through drug testing; and (4) use of legal
sanctions as inducements to remain in treatment.
Discover the Treatment Approach that is RIGHT For
You: Let our
consultants help you identify the drug or alcohol addiction treatment / drug
rehab program that meets your specific needs. We have an ever growing database
of Drug and alcohol rehabilitation centers and treatment facilities offering a
wide variety of addiction treatment methodologies and approaches. Fill out one
of the pre-screening forms above to begin the recovery process today.
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