If you’re looking into treatment, the sheer amount of terminology can feel like a lot to take in. In the U.S., most programs are built around three main pillars: drugs, alcohol, and compulsive behaviors.
One of the most important things to look for is Dual Diagnosis care. It’s a fancy way of saying the facility treats the addiction and the underlying mental health stuff—like anxiety, depression, or PTSD—at the same time. If you don't treat both, it’s a lot harder to make the recovery stick.
1. Substance Use (SUD)
This isn't just about "street drugs." A huge part of modern treatment involves helping people get off legal prescriptions that have taken over their lives.
- The Opioid Crisis: This covers everything from heroin and fentanyl to common painkillers like Oxy or Codeine.
- Stimulants: Think meth and cocaine, but also "study drugs" like Adderall or Ritalin.
- The "New" Cannabis: With high-potency vapes and concentrates, cannabis use disorder is becoming a much more frequent reason people seek help.
- Anti-Anxiety Meds: Detox from "benzos" (Xanax or Valium) and sleep aids requires a very careful, medical approach.
2. Alcohol Use Disorder (AUD)
Alcohol is still the most common reason people walk through the doors of a rehab center. Treatment usually focuses on two different patterns: Binge Drinking (doing a lot of damage in a short window) and Heavy/Chronic Drinking (long-term use).
Note: Because alcohol withdrawal can actually be life-threatening, "Medical Detox" isn't just a suggestion—it’s often a clinical necessity.
3. Behavioral Addictions (The "Process" Addictions)
You don’t have to be putting a substance in your body to be struggling with addiction. Clinics are seeing more and more people for things like:
- Gambling: Currently the only "behavioral" addiction fully recognized in the medical manuals, but it's far from the only one.
- The Digital Loop: Compulsive gaming, social media use, or internet scrolling.
- Compulsive Habits: This includes things like sexual addiction, shopping/spending that’s ruined someone's finances, or binge eating.
What does "The Work" actually look like?
Most centers use a "toolbox" approach. You won't just do one thing; you'll likely do a mix of these:
- Residential vs. Outpatient: You either live at the facility for 30–90 days (Inpatient) or you stay at home and come in for several hours a day (IOP or PHP).
- MAT (Medication-Assisted Treatment): This uses FDA-approved meds like buprenorphine or naltrexone to quiet the "noise" in your brain so you can focus on therapy without constant cravings.
- The Therapy Part: Most places rely on CBT (changing thought patterns) or DBT (learning how to handle intense emotions) along with group sessions.



