Women’s Residential Rehab: Is Inpatient Rehab Really Necessary?
Like most any area of addiction treatment, women’s residential rehab programs can vary in treatment approach and intensity level. These differences work to meet the range of needs each women brings to the recovery process. This is especially the case with inpatient rehab treatment.
According to the National Institute on Drug Abuse, addiction’s effects can impact a person’s life on many levels. While the addiction problem may be the most disruptive, underlying physical and psychological conditions can greatly aggravate addiction behaviors.
Not every women who enters the treatment process will require the intense level of care provided by inpatient rehab, but those who’ve struggled with addiction for months or years at a time can greatly benefit from what an inpatient rehab program has to offer.
Please don’t hesitate to call our toll-free helpline at 888-821-1257 Who Answers? with any questions you may have about women’s residential rehab treatment.
The Aftereffects of Addiction
Considering the range of roles women fill in today’s society, such as mother, provider, significant other, addiction can have devastating effects overall. Whether it be drugs or alcohol, addiction’s effects warp the way a person thinks, feels and interacts with her environment.
For someone with a long history of substance abuse, addiction’s aftereffects essentially leave a shell of a person in its wake.
When Is Inpatient Rehab Necessary?
Chronic and/or Long-Term Drug Use
Women coming off chronic or long-term drug use stand to see the very worst of what addiction has to offer. Over time, addictive substances have a cumulative effect on brain and body functioning.
In essence, the longer substance abuse continues the more dependent the brain and body become on the drug’s effects. By the time addiction sets in, widespread chemical imbalances persist throughout the brain’s chemical system, which accounts for why it’s so hard to stop using on one’s own.
Medical Problems
Severe addiction problems can disrupt the body’s major systems to the point where chronic medical conditions, such as heart disease, hypertension and diabetes can develop along the way. When left untreated, these conditions will compromise a person’s efforts to maintain abstinence from drug use.
According to the Substance Abuse & Mental Health Services Administration, inpatient rehab programs provide round-the-clock medical care and treatment that works to stabilize chronic medical conditions.
Mental Health Problems
It doesn’t take very long at all before the effects of drug abuse start to interfere with a person’s mental and emotional well-being. After months or years of substance abuse, full-blown psychological disorders can easily take shape.
Disorders, such as depression and anxiety make it all the more difficult for a women to fulfill daily obligations. Psychological problems also fuel drug-using behaviors and actually start to take an active role in driving the addiction problem.
Inpatient-based women’s residential rehabs have ample experience in providing needed treatment and emotional support when dealing with mental health issues.
Considerations
Ultimately, the need for inpatient rehab becomes more so apparent once you’ve reached the point where standard treatment program approaches fall short in helping her overcome addiction in her daily life. When this is the case, an inpatient-based women’s residential rehab problem may well be able to provide the level of care most needed to help you get well once and for all.
If you’re considering inpatient rehab and need help finding a program that meets your needs, call our helpline at 888-821-1257 Who Answers? to speak with one of our addiction specialists.
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