If you are experiencing Heroin/Fentanyl addiction, you know how painful and frightening the withdrawal process can be. This is why the relapse rates are so high in Heroin cases. Extreme agitation, sweating, muscle spasms and aches, severe nausea and abdominal pain combined with strong cravings are difficult to overcome on your own.
Treatment for Heroin addiction often starts with Supervised Detoxification. Detoxing from Heroin can bring about severe symptoms like intense nausea and dehydration and is very dangerous to do on your own, not to mention painful. At Pathways Recovery Center, we’ll make sure you’re medically stable under the monitoring of our on-site clinical and nursing staff who are experienced in implementing medication-assisted detox. This will ensure the safest and least painful withdrawal experience.
In our private, intimate facility designed for serenity and comfort, you’ll begin intensive therapy to not only address addiction, but the underlying factors that led to it. At Pathways, we believe that healing addiction means healing the whole person. You’ll undergo assessments to determine each of the contributing biological, social, and psychological factors that have kept you in the cycle of addiction. Using evidence-based therapies like CBT and DBT, we’ll help you learn new coping skills and positive thinking patterns that will help you overcome your cravings, master your emotions, and heal. At Pathways Recovery Center, we’ll get you the social support you need to stay free from drug and alcohol addiction with tools like 12 Step and group therapy. You are not alone! And for those wondering “what does heroin look like?” or seeking help with purple heroin, understanding its appearance is crucial to early detection and intervention in addiction cases.
Dr. Moses Nasser, a double board-certified physician in Family Medicine and Addiction Medicine, with expertise in holistic healing, addiction medicine, and psychiatric care, holds an X-waiver to prescribe buprenorphine and has extensive experience in mindfulness-based customer service and medication-assisted treatment.
Additional Resources on Alcoholism:
Heroin Addiction
What are the Treatments for Heroin Use Disorder?