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AMAR Home
Rehabilitation in Uttara

www.amarhome.org
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Remember you found this company at Infoisinfo 88 0196618661?

Address

House # 46, Road # 02, Sector 09, Uttara, Dhaka - 1230. P.C. 1230, Uttara, Dhaka.
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What you should know about AMAR Home

Rehabilitation Centre in Uttara, Rehabilitation Drug in Uttara

AMAR Home is a pioneer drug addiction treatment center where you get freedom from addiction and we are dedicated to help people who are suffering from drug addiction. Our treatment program is built on the foundations of Detoxification, Therapeutic community, Psychological counseling with the influence of 12 Step based support groups.

When it comes to drug addiction rehabilitation programs, there is no shortage of options out there but it's important to find a program that is a good match for you. If you feel comfortable with the facility you've chosen, you're more likely to stick with the program and see it through to its end, increasing your chances of long-term health and sobriety.

Our Inpatient treatment program is intended to remove addicts from their old ways of life and place them into a medically supervised treatment facility. This inpatient care helps to eliminate stress by removing the individual from temptation and the ability to relapse, both during the detox and rehabilitation processes. 24-hour medical supervision during detox is provided. Patients are restricted from contacting family and friends during the first portion of the rehabilitation process. This allows them to focus solely on their recovery without distractions from the outside world. Over time, family members and close friends may be invited to participate in visiting days or family therapy sessions. This helps to build the support system that is so crucial to recovering addicts once they leave the rehab facility.

Drug detox is the first step in a comprehensive rehabilitation program that offers all the tools required for recovery. The focus of detoxification is physiological healing after long-term drug addiction – first, through stabilization and then through detoxification. According to the AMAR Home Drug Addiction Treatment Center after stabilization, the focus of detox is on the processes of the body as it rids itself of the drug of choice and treating the withdrawal symptoms that result.
It is important to note that detox is not a whole treatment for drug addiction no matter what the drug of choice. Because addiction is both psychological and physical in nature, it is imperative that patients undergo psycho-therapeutic treatment to address the issues of cravings and changes that were made in the brain by chronic abuse of the drugs. Detox alone may help the patient to stop abusing drugs and alcohol, but without the core program, follow-up and after care relapse will soon follow and a return to full-blown addictive behavior is rarely far behind.

Long-term residential treatment provides care 24 hours a day, generally in non -hospital settings. The best-known residential treatment model is the therapeutic community based on a modified 12-step approach. The program is designed to treat drug and alcohol problems with lengths of stay of 3 months. This program focus on the "re-socialization" of the individual and use the program’s entire community—including other residents, follow-ups, volunteers, staff, and the social context—as active components of treatment. Addiction is viewed in the context of an individual’s social and psychological deficits, and treatment focuses on developing personal accountability and responsibility as well as socially productive lives. Treatment is highly structured and can be confrontational at times, with activities designed to help residents examine damaging beliefs, self-concepts, and destructive patterns of behavior and adopt new, more harmonious and constructive ways to interact with others.

Individualized drug counseling not only focuses on reducing or stopping illicit drug or alcohol use; it also addresses related areas of impaired functioning—such as employment status, illegal activity, and family/social relations—as well as the content and structure of the patient’s recovery program. Through its emphasis on short-term behavioral goals, individualized counseling helps the patient develop coping strategies and tools to abstain from drug use and maintain abstinence. The addiction counselor encourages 12-step participation (at least one or two times per week) and makes referrals for needed supplemental medical, psychiatric, employment, and other services.

Follow-up care is usually the most important component of drug addiction treatment.

Think of it this way: While clients are in a residential or full-time drug addiction treatment program, it is like being in a basic training for the armed services. Once they leave, they have to apply what they know. they are in an actual war zone. Suddenly their situation becomes dangerous, but their skills are new and unpracticed. They now need continued professional help and informal support from friends and family more than ever, because they are moving out of the theory and into the practice of living a drug- free life.

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What Is Drug Addiction?Drug addiction is a chronic, often relapsing disease that causes compulsive drug seeking and use, despite harmful consequences to the drug addict and those around them. Drug addiction is a brain disease because the abuse of drugs leads to changes in the structure and function of the brain. Although it is true that for most people the initial decision to take drugs is voluntary, over time the changes in the brain caused by repeated drug abuse can affect a person's self-control and ability to make sound decisions, and at the same time create an intense impulse to take drugs.It is because of these changes in the brain that it is so challenging for a person who is addicted to stop abusing drugs. Fortunately, there is drug addiction treatment that help people to counteract addiction's powerful disruptive effects and regain control. Research shows that combining addiction treatment medications, if available, with behavioral therapy is the best way to ensure success for most patients. Treatment approaches that are tailored to each patient's drug abuse patterns and any concurrent medical, psychiatric, and social problems can lead to sustained recovery and a life without drugs.As with other chronic diseases, such as diabetes, asthma, or heart disease, drug addiction can be managed effectively. Yet, it is not uncommon for a person to relapse and begin abusing drugs again. Relapse does not signal failure; rather, it indicates that treatment should be reinstated or adjusted, or that alternate treatment is needed to help the person regain control and recover.
Probably the most simply answer to this question is, if the person continues to use drugs or seek drugs compulsively in spite of negative consequences, he or she is probably addicted.If they continue their drug-seeking behavior despite of having family or relationship conflicts, financial difficulty, employment problems, health consequences or problems with law enforcement, chances are the person's drug use has advanced to the addiction stage.Family members or friends may notice changes in the appearance and behavior of a drug addict:
  • Has their behavior or personality changed recently? Are they withdrawn, irritable, anxious, apathetic?
  • Have their eating habits changed?
  • Do they seem to be neglecting their hygiene and appearance?
  • Have they lost interest in activities which they used to enjoy?
  • Do they socialize with a different set of friends?
  • Are they running into financial difficulties
  • Are they getting into trouble with the law?

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Perhaps you admit you have a problem with drugs, but you don’t consider yourself an addict. All of us have preconceived ideas about what an addict is. There is nothing shameful about being an addict once you begin to take positive action. If you can identify with our problems, you may be able to identify with our solution. The following questions were written by recovering addicts in Narcotics Anonymous. If you have doubts about whether or not you’re an addict, take a few moments to read the questions below and answer them as honestly as you can.
  • Do you ever use alone? [Yes] [ No]
  • Have you ever substituted one drug for another, thinking that one particular drug was the problem? [Yes] [ No]
  • Have you ever manipulated or lied to a doctor to obtain prescription drugs? [Yes] [ No]
  • Have you ever stolen drugs or stolen to obtain drugs? [Yes] [ No]
  • Do you regularly use a drug when you wake up or when you go to bed? [Yes] [ No]
  • Have you ever taken one drug to overcome the effects of another? [Yes] [ No]
  • Do you avoid people or places that do not approve of you using drugs? [Yes] [ No]
  • Have you ever used a drug without knowing what it was or what it would do to you? [Yes] [ No]
  • Has your job or school performance ever suffered from the effects of your drug use? [Yes] [ No]
  • Have you ever been arrested as a result of using drugs? [Yes] [ No]
  • Have you ever lied about what or how much you use? [Yes] [ No]
  • Do you put the purchase of drugs ahead of your financial responsibilities? [Yes] [ No]
  • Have you ever tried to stop or control your using? [Yes] [ No]
  • Have you ever been in a jail, hospital or drug rehabilitation center because of your using? [Yes] [ No]
  • Does using interfere with your sleeping or eating? [Yes] [ No]
  • Does the thought of running out of drugs terrify you? [Yes] [ No]
  • Do you feel it is impossible for you to live without drugs? [Yes] [ No]
  • Do you ever question your own sanity? [Yes] [ No]
  • Is your drug use making life at home unhappy? [Yes] [ No]
  • Have you ever thought you couldn’t fit in or have a good time without drugs? [Yes] [ No]
  • Have you ever felt defensive, guilty or ashamed about your using? [Yes] [ No]
  • Do you think a lot about drugs? [Yes] [ No]
  • Have you had irrational or indefinable fears? [Yes] [ No]
  • Has using affected your sexual relationship? [Yes] [ No]
  • Have you ever taken drugs you didn’t prefer? [Yes] [ No]
  • Have you ever used drugs because of emotional pain or stress? [Yes] [ No]
  • Have you ever overdosed on any drugs? [Yes] [ No]
  • Do you continue to use despite negative consequences? [Yes] [ No]
  • Do you think that you have a drug problem? [Yes] [ No]
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Additional information

  Opening times Opening Closing
   Mondays to fridays 9:00 17:00
   Monday 9:00 17:00
   Tuesday 9:00 17:00
   Wednesday 9:00 17:00
   Thursday 9:00 17:00
   Friday 9:00 17:00
   Saturday 9:00 17:00
   Sunday 9:00 17:00

Payment methods we use:

  • Cash
  • Bank transfer
  • Bank check

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