Cleaning Out the Drug

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The treatment for PCP, like other addictive drugs, involves detoxification, or withdrawal. Before recovery can occur, the association with the drug has to end. When access to the drug ends, the body begins to react, inflicting a wide range of unpleasant sensations and experiences on the addict. Withdrawal can include pain, nausea, cramps, sweating and chills, convulsions, mood swings, depression, anger, anxiety, paranoia and more.

The process usually takes between five days and a week. Counselling may begin during or before withdrawal, though it’s often most focused on after withdrawal has ended.

 

Counselling – Training Yourself for a New Life

After detox, the recovering addict focuses on counselling. This usually includes forms of behaviour modification to help replace the habits of an addict with new habits that leave no room for drug use. Person to person counselling is also common, as are group therapy and family therapy, both intended to help restructure an addict’s life to provide support for a non-addictive future, rather than support to continue an addicted past.

The combination of therapies ideally is meshed with follow-up treatment, usually in the form of a long-term association with a 12-step program. Studies have indicated that committed participation in 12-step and other follow-up programs can as much as double the success rate of recovering addicts. An addict can expect to be strongly encouraged to enter a 12-step plan and make participation a major priority.

 

Finding Help for Recovery

Whether you or someone you know is in need of help and support getting through the process of drug rehabilitation, it’s most easily done using good resources to guide you to solid programs and professionals. By making use of referrals from hospitals, doctors, police programs, state or church programs, or school programs, you can reduce the challenge of finding trustworthy programs and clinics that can reliably care for a recovering addict.

There are also professional referral services, which have in many cases done the preliminary work of sorting out the least desirable professionals, and identifying their areas of skill and interest, allowing them to find the best match for you or yours.


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The Have I Got A Problem website is a free online resource to help people better understand any issues or concerns they may have about mental health or addiction. The website includes resources specifically focused to; general Mental Health, Depression, Stress, Anxiety, Insecurities, Self-harm Schizophrenia, Bipolar, Anger Management, Eating Disorders, Coping, general Addiction, Alcohol, Smoking, Gambling, Drugs, Cocaine, Heroin, Marijuana (Cannabis) Ecstasy, PCP, Mephedrone, Ketamine & Crystal Meth.

The site was created to give the public information to help them understand mental health and addiction issues and to assist people in making better informed decisions about their life and personal choices.

www.haveigotaproblem.com was created and is run by 'Advising Communities’, which is a UK registered charity (Charity No. 1061055)

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"Is PCP addictive? I don't know. But I can tell you this much: it's not worth finding out."

Silvia

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