Do Religious Drug Rehab Programs Work?
I’ve worked with many treatment centers over the years, and have attended a few as well, some faith-based, some secular, and some that appear to be secular but are, in fact, religious - traditional 12 step-based programs, for example, promote themselves as secular, but most of the meetings I attended pushed a Christian viewpoint as the only acceptable higher power. While in drug rehab, a person can be very vulnerable, making it harder to resist any religion that is pushed and, while faith is important, those circumstances are probably not ideal for making that kind of decision. The programs I’ve worked with that don’t have a religious bias seem to get much higher success rates and, at the same time, are able to help more people since they don’t alienate anyone based on their religious beliefs. It would seem then that drug rehab programs that are not faith-based are a better option.
I think all drug rehab programs have a spiritual aspect to them, and that they should. Again, faith is important for most people. But it seems that a religion should be something a person comes to on their own rather than having it dictated to them as part of their treatment. Also, although many of the Christian-based drug rehabs advertise high success rates, their retention rates are not that great. One nation-wide program that runs an average of 8 to 12 months claims a high success rate but also has a very high number of drop-outs, which lowers the actually success rate significantly.
One of the best drug rehabs I’ve worked with is a longer term program that admits people of any religious background. When it comes to spirituality, the program simply has the clients take a look at what that means for them and what role it plays in their life. I found this very refreshing - there is no religious undertone because no specific religion is promoted. It creates an inclusive environment where a person can truly find out who they are which, to me, is the most important element of a successful drug rehab program.
God can play a big role in a person’s life, but when it comes to putting down the crack pipe, it’s the individual who has to do it. God may be able to offer direction, but He can’t take the pipe out of their hand. I think for a drug rehab to be successful a secular option is the best way to go.
I think all drug rehab programs have a spiritual aspect to them, and that they should. Again, faith is important for most people. But it seems that a religion should be something a person comes to on their own rather than having it dictated to them as part of their treatment. Also, although many of the Christian-based drug rehabs advertise high success rates, their retention rates are not that great. One nation-wide program that runs an average of 8 to 12 months claims a high success rate but also has a very high number of drop-outs, which lowers the actually success rate significantly.
One of the best drug rehabs I’ve worked with is a longer term program that admits people of any religious background. When it comes to spirituality, the program simply has the clients take a look at what that means for them and what role it plays in their life. I found this very refreshing - there is no religious undertone because no specific religion is promoted. It creates an inclusive environment where a person can truly find out who they are which, to me, is the most important element of a successful drug rehab program.
God can play a big role in a person’s life, but when it comes to putting down the crack pipe, it’s the individual who has to do it. God may be able to offer direction, but He can’t take the pipe out of their hand. I think for a drug rehab to be successful a secular option is the best way to go.
Labels: drug rehab, drug rehab program, successful drug rehab, successful drug rehab program







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