After seeing all of the damage that drugs and alcohol have done to you, it may be time to think about the best course of treatment. The first step toward successful addiction recovery for many people is checking into a drug and alcohol inpatient treatment center. Knowing the severity of your addiction and what your life is like will determine when it is best to make that phone call toward rehab.

Drugs and Alcohol Are a High Level of Importance

You know your drug or alcohol abuse has turned into full-blown addiction if substance use feels like your reason for living. Your thoughts may be focused on using substances and finding ways to acquire more. You may notice your bank account growing empty because you have used all of your savings toward drugs or alcohol. Your work, home, and school responsibilities may have also taken a backseat because you prefer using drugs or alcohol to take up your time. If you look back on what you do during the day, with drug or alcohol use being the only thing you do, it may be time to look into inpatient treatment.

Taking Too Much to Feel the Effects

The first time you take drugs, the feelings of euphoria are very raw and intense. However, once your drug use becomes a habit, your body will get used to the effects, building tolerance. Tolerance causes you to need more and more of the substance in order to achieve the desired effects. If you increase your drug or alcohol quantity, this will increase your chances of an overdose, becoming comatose, or even death.

Poor Health

While you may think that drugs are helping you feel good, your body and mind are suffering the consequences. Each drug has its own specific effects on the body. For example, alcohol can lead to liver problems and other kinds of cancers. Other factors for physical health issues can include how long you have taken the drug and the amount taken.

Your mental health can also take a toll when you use drugs. Drugs and alcohol change the way the brain works, which affects your behavior. This can lead to anxiety, depression, or even psychosis. According to the National Institute on Drug Abuse, self-medication can lead to drug addiction when using drugs or alcohol to mask mental health symptoms. You may not know that drugs can trigger or worsen mental health symptoms, leading to the vicious cycle of using more drugs. If you or others notice any changes in your behavior, thinking, or feelings, drug and alcohol inpatient treatment centers can provide you with physical and mental health monitoring.

Problems in Life

Drugs and alcohol can bring you problems in your life that you have never had before. Maybe you have driven home intoxicated and gotten a ticket or a jail sentence. You also could have called out of work many times because you are too hungover to go. Because your vision, coordination, and judgment are affected when under the influence, this can lead to many hospital visits from serious injuries. Your relationships can also be impacted as drugs and alcohol can make you say or do hurtful things you would not do if you were sober. More arguments may occur as well as isolation – hanging out with your friends or partner may not be as fun as using substances. Luckily, inpatient rehab can teach you how to mend relationships that drugs and alcohol took away from you.

Hard to Quit on Your Own

You may think that recovery is as easy as simply stopping. In reality, that could not be further from the truth. As soon as you stop using drugs or alcohol, you experience uncomfortable withdrawal symptoms like sweating, shaking, nausea, and more. At a drug and alcohol inpatient rehab, medically supervised detoxification can help your body through its natural process of clearing out drugs or alcohol and monitoring your withdrawal symptoms. 

Inpatient rehab can also introduce you to a personalized treatment plan based on the severity of your addiction and your history with it. If you have tried to recover on your own and failed, this is a sign you need the professional services rehab can offer you, such as therapy, medication, safety, and structure.

Benefits of Rehab

Inpatient rehabs can provide you with a number of treatment options that you would not have otherwise, including:

  • Screening and diagnosis of substance use disorder and mental health disorders
  • Medication management
  • Different modes of therapy
  • Substance abuse and mental health education
  • Drug and alcohol testing
  • Aftercare services

If you are struggling with substance use disorder (SUD) and a mental health disorder, find a rehab that can treat both. This will increase your chances of long-lasting recovery. Inpatient treatment can provide you with on-the-clock care where your medical and psychological needs are taken care of. 

Staying at a facility can also keep you away from anything or anyone that can distract your recovery. You can also see what kind of help you would like to receive, whether your main focus is on medication management or you want a more holistic approach to recovery through yoga or meditation.

Recovery may be a long road ahead of you with the possibility of relapses and obstacles. However, inpatient treatment can teach you how to take what you have learned during your stay and apply it to the real world.

If you have been struggling with drug or alcohol use for a long time, you may not know how intense your addiction needs to get before you think about calling an inpatient facility. The answer is that you should not wait one more second. The longer you wait to pick up the phone and call a rehab facility, the worse your life will get from drugs and alcohol. You can determine whether or not treatment is what you need when you evaluate what your life has been like when your drug use started. Think about how much you have lost that you treasured before. Hawaii Island Recovery, a rehab center in Hawaii, can help you take the first step toward recovery. Using evidence-based treatment plans, we can provide you with individualized and group therapy, 12-Step meetings, holistic treatments, and more. For more information, call us Hawaii Island Recovery today at (866) 390-5070.