Most people who begin to abuse alcohol are able to regain control some point. Each year, though, millions of adults in America allow their alcohol abuse to get out of hand. Close to 100,000 people die from alcohol-related causes, and close to 1.5 million enter an alcoholism treatment center.
At Alcoholism Treatment Centers Detroit, you are provided the most effective and comprehensive care available to help patients manage and treat their alcohol dependence. The alcoholism treatment programs are customized to fit a patients' specific needs, and provide the best chance for long term recovery.
As with illegal recreational drugs, long-term exposure to excessive levels of alcohol affects the brain's neural pathways, changing them in specific ways. Principally users begin to lose the mental ability to exercise self-control, or to even adequately grasp the nature of their relationship with alcohol. Well-meaning arguments aimed at offering alcoholism treatment tend to make little sense to them. It's important to make a change, though. Alcohol abuse can severely affect their health, and can even lead to alcohol poisoning.
An intervention is often the only way available to bring alcohol addicts to rehab. Staging one isn't simply about presenting strong arguments; nothing stops the addicted person from walking out, after all. Instead, it's meaningful to take up a structured approach. Some intervention methods such as the ARISE model promise success rates as high as 83%.
Unlike hardcore drugs, most people do legally use alcohol at some point in their lives. For reasons of such familiarity, it can seem to many as if quitting alcohol addiction should simple enough to tackle on one's one. Nothing can be further from the truth, though. Alcohol is one of the most addictive substances known, and can only be successfully and safely be withdrawn from at a qualified treatment center. Quitting without medical supervision can turn out to be extremely unsafe.
Alcohol detoxification: Every alcohol rehabilitation program begins with detoxification, a process by which the patient is allowed to quit alcohol under medical supervision that helps with the withdrawal symptoms. While sedatives and antidepressants are often used to help with the depression, agitation, tremors and cardiac irregularities that withdrawal brings, doctors may also use anticonvulsants for seizures. Sodium oxybate is used to help the brain recover regular function, and drugs such as disulfiram (Antabuse is a popular trade name) are prescribed to assist with cravings. Under medical supervision, the withdrawal process turns nearly risk-free.
Therapy: The detoxification process tends to produce the most dramatic and visible effects seen in the rehabilitation process -- it helps patients quit substance abuse in a matter of weeks. The appearance of a full recovery, though, is illusory.
Right out of detox, patients tend to be extremely vulnerable to relapse. They require intensive therapy for the resolve and understanding that they need to demonstrate strength and resistance when cravings turn up. This is where the therapeutic part of the rehab process comes in. Therapists analyze their patients, uncover the reasons for which they turn to alcohol abuse, and devise personalized strategies for them, helping them gain the skills that they need to stay clean.
Addiction is a mental disorder. Family members and friends need to be deeply involved to help loved ones through the entire process. Successful rehabilitation requires an involved care provider, as well. Committed research of the options available is the way to make sure that you find a rehab center that follows scientific, evidence-based treatment practices. If you'd like to speak to someone about how this is done, call Detroit Drug Treatment Centers at (877) 804-1531.