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Drug Treatment With The Right Rehab Center

Posted by: narconontr

Tagged in: rehab

narconontr

What is the right rehab center?  What is the most effective drug treatment?  Two of the most commonly asked questions from those searching for addiction treatment and also asked by those battling a drug addiction.  Most drug addicts will admit there is no point to going back to a rehab center after having been through two, three, four, or even five different or similar programs.  There does come a point where many addicts and loved ones give up and lose hope about ever handling the drug addiction.  Like anything else in life we learn from experience, but every now and then, something does get done right the first time around.   


There is a man with a life threatening illness, and his life hangs in the balance.  He does what most people will do, see different medical professionals, get different opinions and go with the best option possible to save his life.  Realistically this is no different when looking at rehab centers.  An addict’s life does hang in the balance, whether a person likes to see it that way or not.  This is not saying it’s a debilitating disease, not at all, the addict chose the lifestyle, but I am saying it’s a life threatening life style choice.  How many times a day in the media is there stories of drug overdoses, violent crimes involving drugs, collateral damage, hospital visits, one to many close calls; this is seen everyday.  The chronic drug user in society who has given up on getting clean will say these are all scare tactics to get people to go to a drug treatment center; a drug addiction can be controlled.  This can be argued either way, and yes scare-tactics are used, but this is the harsh reality that most choose not to look at.  Don’t make decisions about going to a rehab center or getting help based on false information and stereotypes, look at the drug addiction for what it is, a potentially life threatening problem, which will do more bad then good. 


Drug addiction does not always involve the stereotypical down and out homeless person who has lost everything, and lives as a strung out addict on the street.  This is not always the case; in fact, most people who have entered a drug treatment program, or who are struggling with drug addiction did at one point live a very normal and every day life without drugs, and are basically struggling to return to that life.  Due to different circumstances the individual chose drugs as a solution to their life’s problems.  A quality rehab center has only one purpose, to handle these life’s problems and give the person other solutions, more pro-survival solutions, which in turn eliminates the drug addiction.  There are people who work in this field whom genuinely care and want to help.  There are others who work in the field only to collect a paycheck and look at the addict as just another number.  Do not get disappointed when you are shopping for a rehab center and you feel they don’t care when you are talking to them.  Keep looking for the right rehab center, as was said before this is a life threatening lifestyle choice.  At this point, the only thought going through your mind is, cost; a quality drug treatment program is going to cost something.  You’re absolutely right, the right rehab center will cost something, and a family will have to pay something to get the right help, there is no denying this.  When I say ‘pay something’, this can mean a very broad range of costs, but there is typically a meeting point in cost where quality is separated from poor treatment and ridiculously extravagant addiction treatment.

Like anything else, you normally get what you pay for, but I can assure you, you do not have to pay an exuberant amount of money to get good quality drug treatment.  Traditionally many drug rehab centers operate at very low cost or no cost, and are typically covered by some form of medical or health insurance.  Sometimes you only pay for the room and board, or the local government, or your health care provider absorbs the treatment cost. In other cases the entire process is paid for and is completely free.  What is the downfall?  When something comes at low cost it can be a few thousand or cheaper, but the program will only run from two to three weeks maybe four.  This is not enough time to fully handle any addiction.  In most cases a medical professional will have to refer you to the center, where you will then be put on a waiting list.  This means you cannot normally call the rehab center direct and acquire immediate help.  The staff typically working at these locations are paid to do a job, meaning if the addict is not 100% willing and wanting help, they will not take all the time needed to work with them.  This is not the fault of the staff, this is primarily due to the long waiting lists of people wanting help, or wanting to enter a program.  Because of this factor the staff do not have the time to worry about someone having doubts about getting clean, because there are dozens of other people willing to give it a shot.  There is also the other end of the spectrum, the addict can be treated and pampered like a celebrity, while staying at a resort.

There are treatment centers available that can cost between 50 to 100 thousand dollars; celebrities typically use these, high paid business professionals, owners of fortune 500 hundred companies etc.  There is no doubt, the rehab center will be a five star luxury resort, but the treatment quality will be hit and miss.  A great deal of focus is put on making the client as comfortable as possible, really taking care of everything, which is a good thing; however, can make it very difficult to enforce and follow through with any real treatment models.  These types of drug treatment centers have some of the most qualified experts in the field working there, but when a person comes in looking at their stay as just a vacation, treatment can be next to impossible.  So where is the happy median in all of this?  All throughout North America, quality and affordable private rehabilitation is becoming more common then ever.  A common private treatment center will cost between 15 to 30 thousand dollars for three months or longer.  These are all typically residential addiction treatment centers that provide quality-structured programs handling all aspects of any addiction in any form.  These rehab centers hire trained professionals, and like any other treatment center also hire former addicts who genuinely want to give back through their own experiences.  All the absolute essentials are available at these centers, and the care and determination to help the addict through the program is like no other.  The main focus, as is the same with any treatment center available is to overcome the drug addiction, and of course this is done in many different ways. 


What is the right rehab center?  What is the right form of drug treatment?  Overall and in general, the right rehab center will be whatever you decide it to be.  Through talking with different professionals in the field, you will get an idea of what is available; through your own research you will see the many forms of treatment offered.  Whatever decision is made, always look at the drug addiction for what it actually is, a problem that if not handled properly and thoroughly will most definitely escalate and get worse causing more problems in the future, and from there it only becomes more difficult to solve.

© 2009 Narconon Trois-Rivières. All Rights Reserved.

NARCONON is a trademark and service mark owned by Association for Better Living and Education and is used with its permission.

 

 


THE BEST KEPT SECRET

 

EAI recently launched its 2009 marketing campaign “The Best Kept Secret”, which focuses on reeducating the public as to the services, personnel and recovery community that exists here.  “The myth that EAI is a halfway house of homeless people couldn’t be farther from the truth,” states CEO & Chief Clinical Officer Keith Liles.  “It is important that people know of the changes over the past 24 months, and that at EAI, there is a vibrant supportive residential treatment program featuring customized care, a staff of high achievers and impassioned care giving, and, a commitment to continuous improvement of campus facilities.”

 

Our Internal Marketing team has just produced a promotional video that combines staff and former client testimonies with a virtual tour, as well as redesigning the interactive website. Take a moment and visit www.extended-aftercare.com  to view the video.  Our External Business Development Team is hosting bi-weekly professional breakfasts on campus for private practitioners, treatment centers, EAPs, and other existing funding sources so they can see first hand what the buzz is all about.

 

To further support our mission, we needed to resurrect the once-prominent recovery campus that EAI was for Houston’s recovering community.  Ten to fifteen years ago, EAI was the hub, the center of all recovery in Houston. If people needed 12-step meetings, sober activities, healthy clients to visit with, they gravitated to EAI.  The 12-step meetings were standing room only.  The recreation events were so crowded people were turned away.  Today, with the support of our amazing tenured Alumni Association, we are recreating that burning spirit of recovery all around our campus through the expansion of sober socialization events.  Additionally, we have drastically increased our involvement with the Sober Recreation Committee, revamped and increased the number of onsite 12-step meetings to reach out to greater numbers, and solicited collaborative agreements with some of Houston’s most prominent treatment organizations, such as The Right Step, Santa Maria Hostel, and The Council on Alcohol and Drugs Houston.

 

ADOPT A STREET

 

Extended Aftercare’s administrative offices are located on the corner of North Shepherd and Delz Street.  This past month, EAI decided to “adopt” Delz, a half-mile strip which runs through the main campus and adjacent neighborhoods from Shepherd to Yale.  Armed with shovels, pokers, and contractor bags, client and alumni volunteers combed the street, removing all litter and debris in their path.

 

“I have a lot of gratitude these days.  Being able to give back, to beautify this street with no expectation of reward or validation, but just to do it because I know it’s the right thing – this is what service is all about,” muses Don B., EAI alumnus.  “I can’t help but see the metaphor here in ‘keeping my side of the street clean’.”   

 

A FRIEND IN NEED

 

The greatest thing about Houston’s recovering community is that you can count on people coming to the rescue when needed.  After a recent fire at Santa Maria Hostel, which caused many female clients and their children to be displaced, Extended Aftercare put together Care Baskets, which included clothing, bedding, personal hygiene items and baby materials.    

 

“A great big thanks for EAI's donation.  We have so many that were not able to retrieve any of their belongings.  This will really come in handy for them.  We are so filled with gratitude for this.  I can’t thank you enough,” noted Kay Austin, CEO of Santa Maria Hostel.

 

ALUMNUS TAKES RECOVERY ON THE ROAD

 

Extended Aftercare alumnus Russell P. is well-known in the Houston recovery community, leading meetings in The Heights, at the Turning Point Homeless Shelter, and at EAI.  But he is also known for taking his message of experience, strength and hope on the road.

 

Russ has implemented a new recovery concept at EAI, taking fellow Alumni and sober friends to AA groups out of town such as the “Good for Nothing” in Dickinson and the “New Freedom Motorcycle Group” in Santa Fe.  They recently traveled to the Bay Area for an AA benefit, and most recently made two trips to Bolivar to help that community rebuild their 12-step meeting hall that was damaged in Hurricane Ike.

 

“The Bolivar Peninsula Group is the only meeting in that area, and they really got hit hard by the hurricane,” explains Russ.  “About twelve of us decided it was the right thing to go down there and see what kind of help they needed.”

 

And help they did.  Not only did these men supply 12-step literature and a new coffee pot to the group, they also spent a day priming and painting the devastated facility.  Additionally, Russ and friends raised funds upon their return back to town, and were able to deliver a nice monetary donation to Bolivar.   

 

Please feel free to contact me!

 

J. Andrew Lee/Internal Marketing & Public Relations

Andrew@extended-aftercare.com

www.extended-aftercare.com

713.695.8403/866.912.0315


How Does Medical Insurance Help with Drug Rehab


For millions of Americans addicted to drugs and alcohol in need of drug rehab and alcoholism treatment, the cost of addiction treatment resources makes getting help seem to be out of reach.  With the cost of drug rehab averaging around $20,000 for 30 days of treatment, most Americans need help to afford the costs.  Fortunately, medical health insurance can provide relief from the high costs of drug treatment. 

Private Medical Heath Insurance and Drug Treatment

For most Americans with private medical insurance, or medical insurance not funded by the state, behavioral health benefits will pay for either the majority of drug rehab costs or in some cases, all of the fees.  Depending on the kind of medical insurance an individual has, treatment can be paid for through reimbursement or paid up front.  It is important for every individual to check into their own health insurance plan, but typically, HMO insurance plans do not pay for inpatient drug treatment. The best medical insurance plans to have for payment of inpatient drug treatment are PPO plans.  Although most insurance plans vary in many ways from person to person, having a PPO insurance plan will most often allow for payment on 30 days per calendar year of inpatient treatment anywhere in the country without stipulations on in or out of network facilities.

State Funded Medical Insurance and Drug Treatment

For the millions of Americans receiving help from federal, state and county resources in the form of Medicare and Medicaid medical insurance, the options for payment of drug treatment services are drastically reduced. This country has a plethora of state and county funded drug rehab programs that do accept Medicare and Medicaid, but because of the limited resources these government run facilities have, the quality of care generally suffers, as do the resources available for treatment and the experience of the staff. Since so many Americans do not have sufficient resources to carry private medical health insurance and are in need of assistance from the government, many of the drug rehab facilities that are government run and accept Medicare and Medicaid are overpopulated and have a constant waiting list for entry ranging anywhere from a few days to several months. 

Although these government run treatment programs are generally lower quality and suffer in many areas compared to private drug rehab centers, some help is always better than none at all.  Addiction never gets better on it’s own, and when dealing with a life and death situation like addiction, it is imperative to do everything possible to make drug rehab as accessible as possible, specifically through obtaining a good medical insurance plan that will be there to help when help is needed.


THE THIRST FOR WHOLENESS

AND ADDICTION

By RobertMittiga

(Program Director GATS Counselling & TreatmentServices)

 

At one time oranother, most of us feel some degree of emptiness, loneliness, inadequacy,idealism, or spiritual longing.   Werecognise the discontent, the desire to escape pain, and the tendency to seekanswers in activities, substances, or relationships. This sense of restlessnessand the spiritual longing is familiar to many of us. Over the many years oftreating addiction and co-dependency I have heard many people talk about anon-specific hunger for something that seems to be missing in their lives.   They describe a gnawing emptiness withinthat is never filled.   This insistentstirring from within is so intense that it can, at times, be painful.  It seems to originate at one’s very core, andfor some of us, it feels even stronger than our sexual drive or our hunger forfood.  

 

I was aware ofit as a child, and I tried somehow to fill it by spending hours and hoursplaying pinball machines and snooker, watching television and listening tomusic on my transistor radio, or participating in sports. I struggled with itas a teenager, I felt it as a young adult when I looked at a particularlymagnificent painting, read an eloquent poem, or watched an exquisitedance.  And it manifested during amultitude of other restive moments. The pit of my stomach felt empty, my hearthurt, and my entire being aspired toward something I could not identify. As Igrew, the ache in my soul increasingly permeated all aspects of my life.  I felt monumentally homesick for somethingundefined, for an unnamed entity, place, or experience. Nothing I did seemed toalleviate the yearning within me.

 

There are, I amsure, some fortunate people who feel this longing but do not act upon it inpainful ways.  However, many peopleidentify the spiritual yearning as a persistent voice in their lives, one theyoften confuse with their everyday aspirations. At first, they identify it asthe desire to excel on the playing field, to develop their intellect, to getinto the right university, or to meet the man or woman of their dreams.   Perhaps they feel an overwhelming cravingfor a certain model of car, for a new outfit, or for sexual contact.

 

Thisfundamental appetite might manifest in the abuse of food, alcohol, nicotine, orother drugs.   Some people feel a generaldissatisfaction in their marriage and find themselves longing for somethingmore:  a new house, a baby, a significantchange in their partner’s behaviour, or a completely different relationship.They feel discontented, as though something is lacking.  Perhaps more money would bring happiness, ora better social position, or a new job.

 

I loved my wifeand kids, was satisfied with my business, and felt reasonably good about myaccomplishments.  But something wasmissing.  I found myself thinking aboutmoving to another state or country and even trying another line of business. Isoon began to gamble too much, as well as abuse various mood altering drugs.  After a while, I realized that none of thosethings would help my feelings of emptiness, and in fact, they had begun tocause more problems than they would solve. I felt stuck.”

 

The irony is,no external activities or substances satisfy the initial craving or thefeelings of emptiness. Many people attain the object of their desire, and theincessant ache remains.  One person maywin the lotto or player-of-the-year award for football, another earn anadvanced degree from a prestigious university. Someone else might capture the heart of a perfect mate, make enoughmoney, and live in the style he or she has always wished for.  Yet, even in the midst of the bounty that ismeant to bring satisfaction and fulfilment, the yearning persists, perhaps evenmagnified by the achievements, which only remind us of the emptiness within. Manyrecovering addicts and alcoholics report that once the physical craving for thedrug or behaviour is eliminated, a deeper craving still remains.

 

As a culture,we do not have many sanctioned frame-works in which to deeply experience andsatisfy the yearning for wholeness.  As aresult, people of all ages distort and misdirect this immensely strong impulseinto addictions of all kinds, and co-dependency, not only addictions involvingthe use of chemicals (alcohol & drugs), but also eating disorders, sexualand love addictions, and addictions to power, money, relationships, gambling,and countless other addictive activities.

 

What is thisfree-floating yearning? I believe that Jung was right. This intense and attimes painful craving is deep thirst for our own wholeness, our spiritualidentity, our divine source, or God.

 

This place of wholeness we seekis our spiritual core, an essential component of our nature.  Development of a relationship with this innersource is a common, and necessary, aspect of human existence. I believe thatthis thirst for wholeness is the main driving force in the ever increasingrates of addiction in our society. Unless this factor is addressed in recoveryand addiction treatment, the individual is always going to remain at high riskof relapse or in danger of switching addictions. Simply stopping our addictivebehaviours or replacing them with legal substitute drugs is not enough anddoesn’t work.

 

 

Robert Mittiga

Program Director

GATS Counselling & Treatment Services

P.O. Box 6411 Halifax Street SAAUSTRALIA 5000

Ph 08 8367 0057 (7days)

Website www.gatscounselling.com

 


 

MIDDLE AGED BABY BOOMERS AND ADDICTION

A woman enters my office disheveled, thin, mid forties, with hollow eyes.  It is as if the sparkle in her eyes ceased to exist a very long time ago.  She tells me she has been drinking and is using methamphetamines.  I am not surprised to hear this because lately my practice has been filled with middle aged baby boomers seeking help for their serious addictions.  Whether it is alcohol, cocaine, crack, methamphetamines, pain killers, heroine, or smoking marijuana, many have crossed the line into addiction.  Their lives have become unmanageable and they have lost their ability to control their use.  Some believe they can just cut down, but as addiction specialists, we know it is impossible once you have crossed that invisible line into dependency.   One of their defense mechanisms is "denial" so they can still continue their love affair with drugs or alcohol.  Addiction is the only disease that tells them in the most insidious of ways, "I don't have a problem or disease."  It can be very difficult treating someone who doesn't think they have a problem.  However, on some level this particular woman who landed in my office may already know an issue exists, but can't bare to admit it. 

So what brings this middle aged woman into see me with such desperation on her face?  Her husband has told her if she doesn't stop using, he will leave her and take the children with him.  She tells me she can't imagine not using meth. "It gives me energy to deal with my four kids and keeps my weight down."   I am sure it might be hard to believe that someone in middle age, a soccer mom and a wife feels this way.   It is no longer teenagers or urban minorities taking the lead, although there still is an epidemic of young addicts out there.   These  all American business men, stay at home moms, career women and even the elderly  are filling the treatment centers and therapists offices and some, never make it.   In a recent study, it was revealed that drug deaths from illicit drug over doses had risen 800 per cent since 1980.  One of the fastest growing abuses is pain killers with suburbia filled with these individuals.   It has long been known that there are many reasons for the abuse, but for the middle aged the reasons may be not only the genetic predisposition, but as a buffer to numb the pain of divorce, un-employment, an empty nest, retirement, trauma or illness.  Depression may be one of the biggest culprits to addiction, with it being the highest amongst the ages of 45 to 60.

The "free love" generation of "sex, drugs, and rock ‘n roll" has taken a turn; many would have never expected drug addiction to be their legacy.  Often long standing drug abusers find when the marijuana stops working; they often go to stronger drugs.  For some it is losing their children, a job, a spouse, or homelessness that leads them to seek help.

If you think you have a problem or know someone who does, contact a therapist, psychiatrist, and or chemical dependency counselor to assess the problem.  You can also call one of your local alcohol or narcotics anonymous offices for resources.    There are 12 step meetings going on all day every day.  However, if the addiction or alcohol abuse is serious enough, a detox, a residential treatment center, or a dual diagnosis program may be the best treatment.  A dual diagnosis program works with patients who have not only an addiction, but a mental illness, as well.  The detox may be medically necessary and should always be assessed and treated.  Some of the signs of chemical dependency  include tolerance,  which is a need for increased amounts of the substance to get the desired effect,  withdrawal symptoms, a persistent desire to cut down or control the substance but can't, spending lots of time obtaining the substance, continued use despite psychological or physical problems.  And finally, social, occupational, and or recreational activities are given up or reduced because of the substance use. 

There are many professionals out there to help. Just like the women who entered my office confused and ambivalent, a first step was taken in her battling the disease and beginning the recovery process.   

A graduate of USC, Sherry Gaba, LCSW, is a Licensed Psychotherapist and Life Coach who specializes in alcohol and drug abuse, divorce issues, single parent support, couples, families, and adolescents.  Her website is http://www.sgabatherapy.com/ and she can be reached at sherry@sgabatherapy.com or 818-756-3338.  She has offices in Agoura Hills, California.

 


According to the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration’s (SAMHSA’s) National Survey on Drug Use and Health in 2006, 23.6 million persons aged 12 or older needed treatment for an illicit drug or alcohol abuse problem (9.6 percent of the persons aged 12 or older).  Of these, only 2.5 million—10.8 percent of those who needed treatment—received it at a specialty facility.  These are dire statistics, considering that each year since the early 1980’s, not only has the number of drug and alcohol residential treatment facilities increased dramatically, the internet has provided an ease and accessibility for locating programs designed to provide recovery from substance abuse.  The resources for alcohol treatment especially are now not only plentiful, but also no longer viewed with the same kind of shameful connotation they once were.

Why then are 89.2% of those who struggle with alcohol abuse or chemical dependency not seeking treatment?  No one knows for sure, but experts believe that a lack of private funds, health insurance or public assistance beds, coupled with the obvious cognitive and motivational debilitation that comes with drug and alcohol abuse, prove deadly impediments to entering recovery for those who in fact are in desperate need of it.   For those who are financially capable of funding their own treatment, certainly the opportunities are now abundant.  Health insurance unfortunately has, over the years, increasingly limited benefits for chemical dependency or alcohol treatment.  State or County funded beds in residential programs, even those designed for short term care, are scarce and the waiting lists to secure one of these beds are long.

The fiduciary component of entering drug and alcohol treatment is only compromised more by physical, environmental and social impediments.  Those who are struggling with alcohol or drug addiction are, obviously, often experiencing any number of ancillary problems, either caused by or at least aggravated by their addiction.   Because of their intoxication or abuse, alcohol or drug dependent individuals are often limited in their cognitive or rational functioning.   Many spend a significant time in denial of their disease.  Friends and family may either be unwilling or unable to help.  Often it is not until a “crisis” event or some sort of intervention occurs that help is even sought.

Fortunately, there is hope.  As the number of centers for alcohol treatment and drug addiction recovery grow, so does the awareness of help available.  Internet websites, local and national outreach by drug and alcohol treatment center professionals and media attention increasingly focused on celebrities entering rehab facilities are all easing the sharing of information on addiction treatment resources.  Hopefully the word will grow increasingly stronger and the percentage of those who need help and actually receive it, will as well.


DRUG REHAB

Posted by: harmonyplace

harmonyplace
For many celebrities, at least one stint in a drug rehab appears to be the new “di rigeur.”   One can hardly read a magazine or watch an entertainment report today without learning of yet another famous face that has either been court ordered, convinced by “friends” or decided for themselves that the party is literally over and it is time to spend a month drying out in a drug rehab.  The shock value of an admission of addiction has been inoculated so often over the past several years that even gossip magazines and pundits of pop culture feel comfortable openly recommending that certain celebrities finally surrender and enter a drug rehab for help.   It has become almost a “red badge of courage” for even “D List” entertainers to try and grab another fifteen minutes of fame by “revealing” their struggles with substance abuse and alcohol.
The good news is that those who are struggling with substance abuse and/or alcohol are seeking help through drug rehab.   The secrets, lies, manipulations and denials that have caused many who suffer to face serious consequences as a result of their addiction are no longer necessary.  Addiction has become a part of our culture and the idea of entering a drug rehab is viewed as a positive step – not a shameful bit of business to be covered up by close friends and business associates.  Fortunately, the plan of entering a drug rehab for help has become so positively advocated by healthcare professionals and so publicly showcased by celebrities, that “normal” everyday folks are becoming increasingly more comfortable with the idea as well.  Thus, as our general population continues more and more to view drug rehab as a “good thing,” the concept of entering treatment itself becomes more and more accessible to the population at large.
This is indeed a very good thing.

Alcohol treatment centers for women, and female addiction in general, were until very recently, not even a subject which was discussed in “polite company.”  Fortunately, thanks to the courageous honesty of women like Betty Ford, Carrie Fisher and of course, “celebutantes” like Lindsay Lohan and Britney Spears, not only are women finally able to “come clean” about their struggles with drugs and alcohol, but there are finally gender specific resources to help them overcome their addiction and co-occuring problems.
Professionals in addiction recovery absolutely and unanimously support the benefits of gender specific treatment in terms of addiction recovery.  Especially in dual-diagnosis rehabilitation, where the treatment goal is to undercover the co-occurring disorder(s) generating the alcohol or drug use and then reconcile them in a healthy manner,  the differences in the underlying addiction issues between men and women are often extremely disparate.   Both certainly deserve “equal rights.”    Alcohol treatment centers for women , however, have only made their debut, at least in a sophisticated and comprehensive manner, in the very recent past.   Women who have experienced both co-ed and also gender specific recovery treatment have found that their ability to relax and become authentically honest about their real problems is much easier in gender specific, women’s only rehab.   Professionals are not surprised.  Any time you mix genders, whether it is in a social or therapeutic environment, basic animal instinct is going to imbue the room and innate behaviors will undoubtedly skew the integrity of the work to be accomplished.  Thus, many top rehabs , which once boasted a male-heavy population, then evolved into more evenly mixed co-ed programs, are now closely following the incredible success being achieved by newer programs specifically designed for gender specific recovery.  Alcohol treatment centers for women, especially, have been targeted by rehab “business development” pros looking to promote the most optimal recovery solutions possible.

According to communication professionals and commentators in media psychology, there appears to be a vast shift in the manner in which Americans receive information.  Gone are the days of three major network news programs.   News radio has become an information delivery source reserved primarily for the politically-bent or polarized minds.  The future of the information highway, warn savvy pundits of media psych, lies in the ill-informed hands of entertainment-based programs, which rely on celebrity speculation, the rumor mill and rating-driven prognostications to drive how they share the news.  Thus, it is not surprising that programs such as “Entertainment Tonight,” “TMZ,” and “Extra” are where most Americans receive their daily dose of headlines and thus the latest celebutante headed for alcohol rehabilitation is the top story de rigueur.
Recovery experts have discovered the proverbial silver lining in all of the misinformation chaos.  
With so many programs devoted to the latest celebrity scandals – and a pretty healthy chunk of those falling under a seeming pandemic of drug and alcohol problems – there has never been such a “golden age” for rehabs.  Thus, argue experts in the field of alcohol and drug treatment, although actual hard news has taken arguably suffered a tremendous and perhaps unrecoverable blow in terms of how real facts are dispensed, for the purposes of addiction treatment and especially alcohol rehabilitation, things have never been better.  As Americans watch their idols fall into the drowning well of consequences from drug and alcohol abuse , they also begin, perhaps subliminally, to accept and embrace the rehabilitation process as well.  There are none so celebrated as the rehabilitated – as least in the good old U.S. of A.  So as the famous scions of entertainment seek rehab or recovery through alcohol rehabilitation , perhaps those in the more pedestrian world will emulate the healthy choices of their heroes and also seek true recovery.  Or so those in recovery community hope.

When legendary ‘70’s group “The Eagles” released their Grammy-winning record “Hotel California” in 1978, band member Don Henley called it "our interpretation of the high life in Los Angeles."  Now 30 years later, Henley & Co.’s sardonic tribute to the hedonistic Southern California lifestyle has assumed an entirely different, yet ironically related connotation.  “Drug Rehab California” has become almost a cottage industry for The Golden State, with “Hotel” type luxury rehabs leading the pack.  Seems the “high life” also has a price.  And the price tag can indeed be quite hefty for those who desire to first detox, then learn how to stay that way in one of the many upscale Malibu rehab facilities that have sprung up in recent years.

But are they worth the price?  Critics of these ritzy rehabs complain that too many amenities distract from the real purpose behind the stay:  getting clean and sober.  But pundits of the newly emerging evolution in recovery argue that those accustomed to a “comfortable” lifestyle would never seek admission to one of the more strident recovery clinics available.  Thus, like a fancy automobile or private school, the new Drug Rehab California, has an important market value.

Certainly, the hope is that anyone choosing recovery - which is a good thing – would either investigate (or have an advocate do so on their behalf), with as much due diligence as they would an expensive car or academic institution, the best rehab “fit.”  Although it is certainly true that California drug rehabs are enjoying a tremendous boon in the number of facilities offering treatment for chemical dependency, with that explosion also comes greater choice for the addict or alcoholic seeking treatment.  Gender specific treatment has become the most praised by professionals, in this new wave of California recovery, with many established top drug and alcohol rehabs jettisoning their co-ed structure to offer more specialized treatment for men and women individually.  A top Malibu rehab, Harmony Place, for years established and recognized as one of the best rehabs in the world, was the first of the Malibu rehabs to recognize the importance of gender specific dual-diagnosis treatment.  They launched their Harmony Place Exclusively For Women program in early 2007 to great success.

Whether the cutting edge drug rehab California philosophy will spread, seemingly like all things Californian, to other parts of the nation and world, still remains to be seen.  But one thing is for sure:  at these new “Hotels California,” there may be “mirrors on the ceiling,” but there sure ain’t no “pink champagne on ice.”


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