Alcohol/Drug Detox & Rehab. FDA approved Anti-Craving Medications. Alternative to 12-Step & Methadone Treatment
The patients who choose Assisted Recovery want more than a 12-step program.
Advances in the understanding of neurobiology and human behavior have led to the development of highly effective medications and therapies that allow long-term recovery with little or no disruption of work or family.
Same day appointment for consultation or treatment
Same day outpatient detox services to control withdrawal symptoms
Physician and psychiatric services on an ongoing basis
Flexible schedules for group, individual and family counseling sessions
Access to ARCA and counselors on a 24/7 basis
Patients can return to work or school in 2-5 days and attend therapy sessions in the daytime, evenings and Saturdays
Minimum disruption of work and family life
Six month program to achieve better outcomes
Individualized after care program
Ready for Help?
Here’s the bottom line: If drugs or alcohol are causing problems with someone you care about or your health, family, work or school, finances, or the law, then it’s time to quit.
If a friend, loved one, or colleague says you need help, you probably do. They may see your situation more clearly than you can.
With help from Assisted Recovery, you will get through your first alcohol/drug-free days comfortably and safely. Once you begin anti-craving medications and relapse-prevention therapy, you will be ready to rebuild your life.
What have you got to lose?
Download & Print this Short Assessment
If you ask most alcoholics or drug addicts what it would take to get them to stop drinking or using drugs and they’d probably say they wish they had treatment choices and help when they desperately need it.
Percy Menzies, M. Pharm. believes in offering treatments that incorporate the advances made in the understanding of the neurochemistry of addictions and the results seem like miracles to the patients.
The most exciting part of treatment is using medications that rapidly attenuate the withdrawal symptoms and curb the cravings for the drugs or alcohol. The surprised patients often ask Menzies: “How come even my doctor has not heard about these medications?”
Menzies smiles when he hears this question because the rejection of medications in the treatment of addictive disorders is so widespread and entrenched even among medical professionals that is going to take a long time before medications are routinely accepted within the mainstream of medical practice.