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Substance abuse treatment is the sensible route for those who have an addiction to either drugs or alcohol. Treatment is available through both the inpatient or outpatient basis. There are pros and cons to each. Some programs are available to just one addiction while others integrate both into the same programme.
Inpatient substance abuse treatment offers a more intense programme. It can last for the duration of a month or more, indefinitely in fact. He will be monitored whilst undergoing a detox procedure and they will be also attending both individual and group counselling. Their may be, in addition, a recreational aspect, but it is not technically part of the programme. Inpatients are encouraged to put in a lot if effort into their recovery programme and if they are successful they are further encouraged to attend outpatient therapy or other programs such as AA.
For some addicts, they will be required to attend the outpatient centre as a first port of call. The patient will be expected to have a comparatively easy time in detox and are blessed with a strong support cast i.e. friends and family. Day programmes are the norm for outpatients and they typically offer therapy as their main form of treatment. Typically, these programmes last for up to a month.
Some treatment programmes are designed for those who have alcohol addiction and encourage communication between patients so that they can talk out their issues to others who understand what they are going through and what may have had them end up in the centre to begin with.
There is a school of thought that says that drug abuse patients should be treated separately from alcohol abuse patients as there are a separate set of issues related to each one. The former have bigger problems with fending off their urge to use and also with withdrawal symptoms.