Opiate Treatment Center United States
Why would men and women suffering from drug addiction come from all over the world to a small town in the United States to put an end to their drug addiction? It is because the Rapid Drug Detox (RDD) Center in Michigan developed a “detox” method that works. It is fast, it is effective, and it removes much of the pain and discomfort of withdrawal.
If you or a loved one suffers opiate addiction, you understand the challenge of trying to “go it alone.” Trying to quit often makes you feel worse than the addiction. Yet, you miss the days when you owned your life and you want them back again. You know you need help.
The Rapid Drug Detox (RDD) Center knows it too and they’ve developed the RDD Method™ to ease you through detox.… [Continue Reading]
May Is Mental Health Month
Mental Health Month was established to bring awareness, educate, remove the stigma and find solutions to help the tens of millions of Americans suffering from mental health diseases.
Many who suffer from mental health issues are resourceful and turn to illicit drug use to self-medicate and treat their own disease. Unfortunately, self-medication can lead to addiction, heading to a host of new, additional problems in tandem with the mental illness. Rapid Drug Detox is the first step to free you or your loved one from addiction so you can then receive the proper medical care and treatment plan to conquer your mental health issue. Click here to contact the Rapid Drug Detox Center or call us at 1-866-399-2967. The RDD Center medical professionals are available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week to answer all of your questions.
Drug Addiction Treatment Facility offering RDD Method™
Drug Addiction Treatment Facility
The Rapid Drug Detox (RDD) Center invented the RDD Method™ for detoxification from opiates and other addicting drugs. It’s no suprise that patients come to the Center from all over the world for safe, medically-supervised Rapid Drug Detoxification.
Opiates and other addicting drugs attach to opiate receptors in your body. In the short term, they can relieve pain, but if taken for any length of time as a recent video from the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA/NIH) confirms, they can become addicting. Over 2 million Americans, and 30 million people worldwide have become addicted. While “cold turkey” withdrawal may be possible, it is difficult and painful, therefore, most who try it unfortunately don’t make it.
The RDD Method™ offers a fast and safe medical procedure that eliminates most of the withdrawal symptoms.… [Continue Reading]
The Treatment Gap
According to the NIDA (National Institute of Drug Abuse), there continues to be a large problem in the United States (and around the world) for people to receive help to become free of drug dependence. “In 2012, (date of last study) an estimated 23.1 million Americans (8.9 percent) needed treatment for a problem related to drugs but only about 2.5 million people (1 percent) received treatment at a specialty facility.”
As drug addiction is on the rise, this disparity and availability to resources plays a larger role and presents an increased problem in our society. The gap between the number of drug abusers who need assistance and the number who receive treatment is sizeable. Exploring the need, available assistance, and social stigma associated with drug addiction is important to look at to measure improvement and define success.
It is not only finances and lack of resources that cause this gap, the nature of the disease and how our society perceives drug addiction plays a substantial barrier and continues to block many from receiving needed assistance. Drug abusers often do not seek treatment not only because of denial of the issue but because entering drug rehabilitation and treatment may disclose stigmatized, illegal behavior and the risk of adverse family, social, and economic consequences.
Rapid Drug Detox detoxification treatment center understands the barrier to receiving treatment and the fear of being “found out” and is set up to protect personal and confidential information so people can start on a path to recovery. Read more about how RDD values privacy.
U.S. responsible for EIGHTY percent of the world’s pain pill consumption
An alarming new study has shown that Americans consume 80 percent of the world’s supply of painkillers. This translates to more than 110 tons of pure, addictive opiates every year as the nation’s prescription drug abuse epidemic spirals out of control.
Police are reporting increases in robberies and other crimes by people who are addicted to oxycodone and hydrocodone, the key ingredient in most prescription pain pills.
Another sobering statistic is that this figure gives every single American 64 Percocets or Vicodin; commonly used pain killers. Pain pill prescriptions continue to surge, up 600 percent in a decade, thanks to doctors who are increasingly compliant to hand out opiate drugs to patients.
Even worse is the fact that more of these people are taking these pain pills not for pain-related issues – but to feel normal after they become addicted or to merely get high. Their drug abuse leads to 14,800 deaths a year, which is more than from heroin and cocaine combined.
A Long Island, New York, pharmacist, says doctors are far too willing to hand out prescription painkillers. “We’ve become a society of wusses,” he says.
The pharmacy stopped carrying all of the major addictive pain killer prescription drugs after they were robbed twice by addicts looking to prevent withdrawal.
Police are reporting increases in robberies and other crimes by people who are addicted to oxycodone and hydrocodone, the key ingredient in most prescription pain pills.
In one startling demonstration of the high toll this has wreaked on contemporary society, one of the people lured into crime by drug dependency was 36-year-old man that once owned a successful business in New Jersey.
But an addiction to painkillers led to him taking 90 Percocet’s a day. When the money ran out he was desperate for more drugs. One day, he walked into a bank and handed the teller a note demanding cash. He was caught and arrested shortly after the robbery.
When the police came to bust him, he said he was actually relieved. “I looked in my rear-view mirror and I saw the cops, I saw their lights flashing and I really, really, really remember thinking, well this is it. I’m going to get clean now,” He then spent three years in prison.
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