Looking for a highly-rated detoxification center in Homelake that can help you, your spouse or your child recover fully from an addiction? Whether you want to start to get clean from Damason-P, Concerta, alcohol or any other substance you are addicted to, your road to recovery does not have to be a lonely one. We offer a huge online database of private in-patient or outpatient rehabilitation center, as well as many other options that can support you with your goal of sobriety.
Detox.net is owned and operated by American Addiction Centers (AAC). AAC is a leading rehabilitation provider, offering all levels of care from detox to sober living, including 9 inpatient facilities nationwide.
My 28 y.o. son attended Peaks Recovery for alcohol treatment. From my initial phone call throughout the entire treatment process, I was met with professionalism and competency. We received weekly updates on our son's progress and treatment, and everything we were told would happen, as well as everything in the comprehensive handbook you are given upon admission was exactly as stated. This is a 90 day program with options for a step down into a sober living community for a reasonable price if you your loved one can make it through 90 days. My son elected to leave the program after 35 days, but he did so without having any valid complaints, and the money I had paid up front for the 60 unused days were refunded the day he checked himself out without my even having to call and ask for the refund to be processed. I would recommend this facility without hesitation.
Coming to Rites changed my life! I tried for well over 10 years to overcome my addiction. It was only in coming here and learning to work through my trauma that I found healing. The people at Rites of Passage taught me the tools I desperately needed in order to live a happy healthy life as a whole being.
AIM is a good program with quality staff that understands the struggles and needs of its participants. I feel like I personally gained and learned more about myself during my time as a participant there than I did in my primary care. However; the program is only really suited to help those who WANT to be there. Many participants who "checked out" or saw it as a temporary stop before returning to their everyday lives seem to have struggled after leaving the program. They didn't take things like groups seriously and made little effort actually to improve themselves while being there, and my most considerable criticism of their work is that they do not try to change this mentality while there. It makes it harder for those who are actually trying to gain something from the experience when half the participants spend nearly every day criticizing the program simply because they do not want to be there or do not wish to be sober. That being said, for those who take advantage of all AIM has to offer, I can't think of a better place to transition back into the world. Many staff members have been through treatment themselves and work to help participants navigate the world post-treatment as well as provide them with numerous resources to help them succeed in their time after leaving AIM, everything from helping participants get into college, helping them with job placement, and continuing mentorship and therapy after leaving if they so choose. It has been some time since I was there myself, so it is possible things have changed in terms of the attitudes of participants, but I'll always be grateful for my time there. I believe if it wasn't for AIM supporting and encouraging me the way they did at such a critical point in my life I would have been a lot worse off today.