A National Directory of Drug Treatment Centers and Alcohol Treatment Centers, Therapists and Specialists. A free, simple directory providing assistance and guidance for those seeking help regarding alcohol addiction, drug addiction, dependency and many other conditions that affect the mind, body and soul.
Call 888-647-0579 to speak with an alcohol or drug abuse counselor.

Who Answers?

5 Tips for Success in Alcohol Addiction Treatment

Compared to other types of addiction rehab, alcohol addiction treatment carries a 50 to 60 percent success rate, according to the Centers for Disease Control & Prevention. People who enter alcohol addiction treatment and follow the program greatly increase their likelihood of a successful recovery.

Truth be told, recovering from an alcohol addiction is no easy process, even in cases where a person does follow the program. As with any challenge or pursuit, employing a few helpful tips can make the recovery process easier in the long run.

Here are five tips for success in alcohol addiction treatment that can help ease the process along –

1. Choosing the Right Treatment Program

alcoholism treatment

Making recovery your priority and taking things day by day are indispensable tips in your recovery.

While standardized methods for treating alcohol addiction do exist, programs that use a cookie-cutter approach to treatment may not be able to address a person’s individual treatment needs. Ideally, any one person’s treatment plan should be matched to his or her specific needs, whether those needs be medical care, psychological treatment or any other treatment needs.

Effective alcohol addiction treatment programs start the process off by conducting a thorough assessment of a person’s condition. Information gathered from the assessment becomes the basis of a person’s treatment plan.

2. Developing a Support Network

According to the University of Maryland Medical Center, alcoholism has disease-like effects on the brain and body that persist much like the effects from any other kind of disease. Likewise, alcoholics develop an addiction lifestyle that reflects the psychological mindset created by alcoholism.

Developing a support network (friends, sponsors and treatment professionals) throughout the recovery process enables a person to establish the type of lifestyle that supports long-term sobriety.

3. “One Day at a Time”

Long-term sobriety happens on a day-by-day basis. While long-term sobriety is ultimately the goal to shoot for, a “one day at a time” mindset can help keep a person from feeling overwhelmed by the prospect of never drinking again.

A day-by-day approach entails setting small, reachable goals that support the overall goal of sobriety. In effect, the bulk of each day should entail staying busy, working towards personal goals and having a little fun along the way.

4. Aftercare Planning

For people coming off long histories of alcohol abuse, achieving long-term sobriety means having needed resources and supports in place. Once a person completes treatment, it’s important to remain engaged in the recovery process for as long as he or she intends to remain sober.

Alcohol addiction treatment programs are a great place to gather referrals to other addiction-related community services. Addiction services to consider include:

  • Local 12-step support groups
  • Therapists
  • Physicians

5. Make Recovery a Top Priority

In many ways, recovering from alcohol addiction entails doing the exact opposite of what you used to do when drinking. Just as alcohol was a top priority in your life before recovery, recovery becomes “the” top priority for maintaining sobriety.

As a top priority, maintaining sobriety must dictate the type of friends a person has and the types of activities in which he or she engages. After completing treatment, 12-step support group meetings should become a regular part of a person’s life.

More Treatment & Detox Articles

Botellones, or binge-drinking parties, persist in Spain

The right of Spanish youths to party in the streets is in question. The “botellon” phenomenon, literally “big bottle,” attracts gatherings of youths to drink in parks and squares. People bring their own drinks: soda to mix with gin, vodka or whisky, and wine to make “calimocho,” a blend of coke and wine. Some botellones….

Continue reading

Our gift to our children: alcoholism

Alcohol disinhibits the parts of the brain that control thoughts, feelings and behaviour; that’s why adults drink. Of course, most of us view this less technically in terms of “relaxing” and “enjoying ourselves”. And in most cases, that’s what it lets us do. Yet alcohol’s extraordinary ability to disinhibit other adult impulses is well documented…..

Continue reading

Why is booze so bad for your liver?

Usually When bar staff refuse to serve a customer it’s not that newsworthy. But when 19-year-old Gareth entered a bar in Belfast and ordered an alcoholic drink it set the headlines chattering. Why? Because he had just come from a hospital across the road where had been diagnosed with liver failure, reportedly following a weekend….

Continue reading

Cocaine traffickers switch from boats to submarines as they swamp US with drugs

Colombia’s drug barons used to favour high-speed powerboats to export their deadly cargos, leading law enforcers on high-speed chases as they swamped America with narcotics. Now, in an attempt to evade American surveillance, they are diverting their smuggling trade beneath the waves. Coast Guard and military patrols have reported a dramatic increase in do-it-yourself “semi-submersible”….

Continue reading

Where do calls go?

Calls to numbers on a specific treatment center listing will be routed to that treatment center. Calls to any general helpline will be answered or returned by one of the treatment providers listed, each of which is a paid advertiser.

By calling the helpline you agree to the terms of use. We do not receive any commission or fee that is dependent upon which treatment provider a caller chooses. There is no obligation to enter treatment.

I NEED TO TALK TO SOMEONE NOWI NEED TO TALK TO SOMEONE NOW 888-647-0579Response time about 1 min | Response rate 100%
Who Answers?