Religious Drug Treatment Rehab
Drug rehab services can help you to decide if you or the person in need of help should go to a residential treatment, out-patient facility, long term treatment or short term rehab for their drug rehab.
Drug rehab services can help you find:
- Drugs rehab
- Alcohol treatment
- Drug rehabilitation
- Detox centers
- Withdrawal treatments
- Alcohol rehab
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1-877-939-0929
The long term religious based model of rehab. In this methodology the individual is required to go away for 1 – 2 years. Example: Farming. This methodology is also combined with a religious aspect of prayer, and bible study. There are different approaches depending of the religion. The most known is the christian based program such as Teen challenge.
Because different types of treatment have different lengths of stay, the distribution of clients across modalities differs for "current clients" and "annual unduplicated clients." For instance, outpatients tend to stay in treatment for much longer periods than inpatients. Approximately 90 percent of current clients are enrolled in outpatient treatment. Nonetheless, over the course of a year, only about two-thirds of individuals are in outpatient treatment. The approximations of annual unduplicated clients and of admissions have been adjusted to account for individuals who receive multiple types of treatment and/or relapse and are readmitted to treatment in a year.
Many Federal- and State-funded institutions and health care arrangements also offer or cover alcohol and narcotic abuse treatment services for the military, veterans, prisoners, and Native Americans. The Office of National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP) reports annually on Federal expenditures for narcotic abuse treatment services in the Department of Defense, Department of Veterans Affairs, Department of Justice, and the Indian Health Service. ONDCP's approximations have been doubled to account for the proportion of alcohol-only present clients served through these Federal agencies.
Specialty alcohol and narcotic abuse treatment services provided in 1992 cost an estimated $7.2 billion, of which $4.1 billion was principally for alcohol abuse treatment and $3.1 billion, was principally for drug abuse treatment. These cost estimates are based on the cost per individual generated from analyses of the 1991 NDATUS by Harwood et al. (1994), adjusted for inflation to 1992, and budget figures reported by ONDCP for Federal agencies. Utilizing NDATUS, Harwood et al. (1994) calculated that the per diem cost for a hospital-based treatment bed was between $340 and $440 (depending on source of payment). In opposition, previous researches (e.g., Rice et al. 1990) have utilized the much elevated average per diem cost for a non-alcohol- and drug-abuse treatment bed in general acute care hospitals, which was $816 in 1992 (exclusive of independent doctor expenses).
Call one of our counselors now!
1-877-939-0929