Patient & Family Education Platform

The science of
getting better.
Explained clearly.

Side-by-side breakdowns of every treatment path — inpatient vs. outpatient, every medication option, every recovery philosophy — without the clinical distance.

20.5M

Americans currently living in recovery

You are not alone in this.

4.3

Average treatment attempts before sustained sobriety

Persistence is part of the process.

67%

Better outcomes when patients understand their own treatment plan

Which is why you're here.

Here’s what actually happens

Yourbrainchangedthroughrepeatedexposure.Itcanchangeagainthroughstructured,sustained,supportedtreatment.Thisisneuroscience,nothope.

Inpatient, outpatient, and everything in between.

Your level of care should match the severity of your dependence, the safety of your home environment, and your daily obligations. Here's how each setting actually differs — not in theory, but in practice.

CategoryInpatient / ResidentialLive-in treatmentPartial Hospitalization6–8 hrs/day, home nightsIntensive Outpatient3 hrs/day, 3–5x/weekStandard Outpatient1–2 sessions/week
Duration28–90 days2–6 weeks8–12 weeks3–12 months
Best suited forSevere dependence, unsafe home environment, co-occurring disordersStep-down from inpatient, moderate severity, stable housingWorking adults, early-stage dependency, strong support networkMild dependency, maintenance phase, high-functioning
Medical supervision24/7 on-site physiciansDaily medical check-insWeekly psychiatric oversightAs-needed basis
Avg. cost (30 days)$6,000 – $60,000$3,500 – $18,000$1,400 – $10,000$1,000 – $5,000
Insurance coverageMost plans, 60+ days under Parity ActWidely covered, pre-auth often requiredBroadly covered, lower co-paysTypically covered, minimal barriers
Disruption to daily lifeHigh — full pause on work, familyModerate — evenings and weekends freeLow–moderate — flexible schedulingMinimal — fits around existing schedule
12-month sobriety rate35–65% (severity-adjusted)40–60%30–50%20–35%
Take the 5-minute assessment — no email required

“Medication-assisted treatment isn’t replacing one addiction with another. It’s treating a brain disease with medicine — the same way we treat diabetes with insulin.”

American Society of Addiction Medicine

Your medication options, without the mythology.

Your brain's opioid receptors don't care about stigma. These are the four main pharmacological approaches, compared on the evidence that actually matters — not the assumptions that follow these medications around.

CategoryMethadoneDaily clinic dosingBuprenorphineSuboxone / SubutexNaltrexoneVivitrol / ReViaAbstinence onlyNo medication
How it worksFull opioid agonist — eliminates withdrawal and cravings by occupying receptorsPartial agonist — reduces cravings with a ceiling effect that limits misuse potentialOpioid antagonist — blocks all opioid effects, requires full detox firstBehavioral therapy only, no pharmacological support
Reduces overdose death↓ 50%↓ 38%↓ 36%No reduction
Typical durationIndefinite (maintenance) — years to lifetime1–3 years average; some use indefinitely6–12 months; monthly injection availableN/A
Requires full detox firstNoPartial (12–24 hrs abstinence)Yes — 7–10 days fully opioid-freeYes
AccessFederally licensed clinics only — daily in-person dosing initiallyAny certified physician, telehealth available since 2023Any licensed prescriber, no special certificationNo prescription needed
Common side effectsSedation, constipation, QT prolongation (cardiac monitoring required)Mild: headache, constipation, insomnia — generally well toleratedNausea (first weeks), injection site reactions, hepatotoxicity risk at high dosesWithdrawal symptoms, higher relapse risk
Your brain chemistryNormalizes dopamine response over months; prevents withdrawal spikesStabilizes receptor activity; partial activation prevents severe withdrawalBlocks reward pathway entirely; no physical dependence possibleReceptors remain sensitized — cravings are neurological, not willpower
See which MAT options match your situation

Your recovery. Your philosophy. Your choice.

There is no single right way to recover. The evidence supports multiple frameworks — and the best one is the one you'll actually stay with. Here's what each approach actually asks of you.

Category12-Step ProgramsAA / NA / CASMART RecoveryScience-based, secularHarm ReductionModeration-inclusiveContingency ManagementIncentive-based
Core philosophySpiritual framework; surrender to higher power; lifelong identity as person in recoveryCognitive-behavioral; self-empowerment; tools not steps; no higher power requiredReduce harm first; abstinence is one option not the only one; meet people where they arePositive reinforcement; tangible rewards for negative drug tests; behavioral conditioning
Evidence baseModerate — large observational studies; RCT evidence limited by anonymity constraintsStrong — CBT foundation with 30+ years of RCT supportGrowing — strong for opioids; robust evidence for needle exchange and supervised consumptionStrong — highest RCT evidence of any behavioral intervention
Meeting frequencyDaily recommended initially; 90 meetings in 90 days common1–2 per week; online meetings widely availableVariable — program-dependent; drop-in models commonTied to treatment schedule — typically 3x/week initially
Abstinence requiredYes — complete abstinence; MAT use is contested in some groupsGoal-dependent — abstinence preferred but harm reduction acceptedNo — reduction goals are valid treatment outcomesYes for incentive rewards; typically tied to specific substance
Best fit forPeople who find meaning in community and spiritual frameworks; alcohol and stimulant use disordersSecular individuals; those who prefer tools over steps; co-occurring anxiety or depressionPeople not ready for abstinence; polysubstance use; housing instabilityStimulant use disorder (no MAT exists); early recovery reinforcement; adolescents
CostFree — voluntary donations onlyFree meetings; workbooks $10–$25Free to low-cost; many services are public health fundedCovered through treatment programs; incentives typically $10–$30/visit
Match your values to the right recovery pathway

The things you’re afraid to Google at work.

Honest answers to the questions that come at 2 a.m. — about cost, relapse, and what “recovery” actually looks like in practice.

Inpatient rehab ranges from $6,000–$60,000 for 30 days. Outpatient programs run $1,400–$10,000 for 90 days. Medicaid covers MAT in all 50 states. Most private insurance covers at least 60 days of residential treatment under the Mental Health Parity Act.

Relapse is part of the clinical picture for roughly 40–60% of people with substance use disorder — the same rate as hypertension and asthma. It is not a moral failure. It is a signal to adjust your treatment plan, not abandon it.

NIDA guidelines recommend at least 90 days of treatment for meaningful outcomes. Detox alone — typically 3–10 days — addresses physical dependence only. Sustained recovery is measured in months and years, not weeks.

No. This is one of the most persistent myths in addiction medicine. Buprenorphine and methadone stabilize brain chemistry without producing the euphoria cycle of misuse. The American Society of Addiction Medicine and every major medical body endorse MAT as first-line treatment.

The average person requires 4–5 treatment episodes before sustained sobriety. Treatment "failure" often reflects treatment fit, not personal failure. Different modalities, medication adjustments, and timing all affect outcomes significantly.

You’ve read enough. Let’s make it personal.

A five-minute, free assessment that maps your specific situation — substance, timeline, support structure, insurance — onto the treatment options most likely to work for you.

No account. No email. No commitment. Just clarity.

In crisis right now? SAMHSA Helpline: 1-800-662-4357 — free, confidential, 24/7.