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  1. Inpatient treatment builds the base upon which outpatient treatment can be successful for a person. Only after inpatient treatment is implemented should outpatient treatment be utilized. This is because outpatient treatment is a less intensive treatment program offered by drug rehabs. It allows clients that have completed inpatient treatment or clients that have progressed to the extent where they do not need inpatient treatment to receive education or continued education for their recovery. The structure of the outpatient drug rehab allows individuals to remain at their place of employment and have a more stable environment to live in also receive treatment for drug and alcohol addiction.
  2. Inpatient treatment offers residential accommodations where outpatient treatment does not. Inpatient treatment, in the wide variety of drug alcohol treatment programs, is referring to a live-in facility where the clients get an extended stay and intensive treatment services. As with outpatient you to both stay at home and come in for treatment or you participate in treatment for a short amount of time during the day. This inpatient treatment stay can last from one month to three months. Most inpatient treatment programs have many different levels of care that are all solution oriented and include the group as well as the individual. Inpatient treatment offers more education opportunities on addiction and coping techniques while outpatient treatment is only for a period of the day it is not as intense. The issues that are covered in inpatient treatment are extensive and very intensive, allowing the person to get the most they can out of their stay here.
  3. Inpatient treatment programs are individually molded and designed to meet each person’s individual needs and this is why it is imperative to attend inpatient treatment before thinking about outpatient treatment. Outpatient treatment keeps it more generalized and in a group setting. The clients who attend inpatient treatment have “home like” living arrangements, daily structure, freedom and independence. The main goal as an inpatient treatment program is not only to help any clients achieve sobriety but contribute to each client’s life in a way that will help them reach their maximum potential. Helping them fully realize the potential in themselves, with their families, their friends, their recovery and their career. Outpatient treatment try to accomplish this within a short amount of time each day which leaves it lacking in accountability and the ability to offer someone trying to recover everything they need. It’s still very beneficial for someone who’s already had inpatient treatment because they’ll already be equipped with a foundation.
  4. Inpatient treatment provides safety and real-life living before outpatient treatment and transitioning into sober living. Inpatient treatment facilities have very strict rules on visitors, communication with people that are not in treatment, family and substances allowed on the premises. The individuals seeking care need the treatment facilities to keep negative influences and substances away from them. Inpatient treatment provides a safe net for them to receive treatment and develop effective coping skills so once they’re ready to venture into the real world they’ll have a higher success rate. It has been found that the approach of inpatient treatment first and outpatient treatment next is most effective. The longer and more effective treatment a client can get the more likely they will be able to achieve success and long term sobriety. With the base foundation of inpatient treatment each person has everything they need to be more than well equipped to gain the highest level of living possible and afterwards can then continue on to outpatient treatment to lock in and create a very solid foundation for their recovery.
  5. Outpatient treatment alone is not enough.  Going to outpatient treatment before inpatient treatment would be equivalent to an aspiring doctor being thrown into active practice straight out of med school. Doesn’t make sense right? Right. You must learn the principles, the psychology, physical, and spiritual aspect of addiction. Then you must apply them in real life, but in the interim you’ll need more structured guidance which inpatient treatment provides. Most addicts and alcoholics needs inpatient treatment in order to find recovery, outpatient alone just isn’t enough. The years of using need to be reversed by a few months of clean time and learning life skills again. Outpatient treatment is a rapid and less intense way of getting what you can out of a treatment center while not actually living in the facility. For instance if you have a job or family you need to be with, outpatient treatment is probably perfect for you but it probably won’t be as effective. If you really want sobriety enroll in a 30 day inpatient treatment program then transition into an outpatient program.

 

 

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Calls to numbers on a specific treatment center listing will be routed to that treatment center. Additional calls will also be forwarded and returned by a quality treatment center within the USA.

Calls to any general helpline (non-facility specific 1-8XX numbers) for your visit will be answered by a licensed drug and alcohol rehab facility, a paid advertiser on PalmPartners.com.

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