top of page
Community and Connection at Glendale Luxury Rehab in Los Angeles. Detox LA

Residential Program

​

What is a Residential Program?

The residential program utilizes a staff of highly trained physicians, assistants, and qualified nurses to ensure our patients’ needs are met, and that comfort is maintained as they recover from drug and alcohol abuse. Our main goal during intensive inpatient treatment is to establish a solid foundation for long-term sobriety. We offer a supportive environment through counseling and therapy sessions in the intensive inpatient program, as well as aftercare addiction services, which helps clients transition to life after rehab.

​

Why Is Inpatient Care Following Detox So Important?

Successful completion of drug or alcohol detox is critical to your ability to recover from severe addiction. However, by itself, detox is not enough to make lasting recovery a reality. Why not? 

​

Detox isn’t designed to help you achieve that long-term goal. Instead, it has the much more limited purpose of helping you reach a state of initial sobriety. To gain the skills needed to keep drugs or alcohol out of your system, you must continue on to a primary drug or alcohol rehab program. And generally speaking, the most suitable program for someone with a severe SUD is inpatient in nature. 

​

Have more questions about why you should enter rehab after completing substance detox? The experts at Glendale Luxury Rehab are ready to connect.

​

Other Reasons to Seek Residential Treatment

Severe addiction is not the only potential reason for seeking inpatient alcohol rehab or inpatient drug rehab in Los Angeles. Many people enter an inpatient program because they have a co-occurring disorder. This is the name for a mental illness that occurs alongside a SUD. An inpatient setting is commonly needed to help you recover from this combination of conditions. 

​

You may also choose an inpatient option if you don’t live in a stable home environment. That’s true because a chaotic household can seriously interfere with effective outpatient treatment. In addition, you may opt for inpatient care so you can avoid anything that might distract you from your drug or alcohol recovery.

​

​

​

What is Residential?

By design, an inpatient program requires you to live at your rehab facility while undergoing treatment. The 24/7 environment of this type of program is highly structured. You spend much of your time in treatment. In addition, you have round-the-clock access to doctors and emergency service providers. This format makes it possible to address any need you may during the course of your treatment. That’s true even for people who have been heavily affected by addiction for years or even decades. 

Treatment in inpatient rehab is provided by an interdisciplinary team of experienced professionals.  Members of this team include:

  • Addiction specialists

  • Medical doctors

  • Mental health specialists

Each of these specialists works with you to create a customized recovery plan. They also carry out this plan and make adjustments to it as you make progress in your program.

Treatment Options in Inpatient Rehab

The core options for effective addiction treatment are the same for both inpatient and outpatient rehab programs. The most widely used recovery methods are forms of psychotherapy such as:

  • Cognitive-behavioral therapy

  • Dialectical behavior therapy

  • Family behavior therapy

  • Motivational enhancement therapy

  • Contingency management intervention

  • 12-step facilitation therapy

Medication is also used to help many people taking part in rehab programs. It plays its most prominent role in the treatment of opioid and alcohol SUDs. Most people who receive medication for opioid or alcohol problems also receive psychotherapy. 

Stable Surroundings in Inpatient Rehab

GLR inpatient rehab not only provides you with crucial addiction, medical, and mental health services. It also provides you with a stable setting in which to receive these services. That stability is an important plus for anyone dealing with a large number of drug- or alcohol-related symptoms. It’s especially important early on in the treatment process. But even later on, a stable environment makes it easier to:

  • Focus on your recovery

  • Develop the new skills you gain while in treatment

  • Overcome the overlapping effects of multiple addiction and substance abuse symptoms

The stability provided by inpatient care can also help simplify the task of reorganizing your daily life when treatment ends.

bottom of page