What is Rapid Detox
or Rapid Detoxification
Rapid
detox treatment is a hospital
procedure to rapid
detoxify the body
from those drugs that cause prescription
medication addiction or opiate dependency,
while under anesthesia and supervised doctor's
care.
(Accelerated Neuro-Regulation):
- Revolutionized the treatment of opiate( i ) addictions
during the course of a decade.
- Allows most patients to return to a productive
life in a matter of days.
- Eliminates the need to spend months in
hospitals or rehab programs.
- Differs
from other methods of detoxification that
do not follow physicians’ safety
protocol.
- Utilizes the most advanced medical biotechnology
available today.
- Distinguishes its success from all other
detoxification methods with its cutting-edge
research on the physical and psychological
aspects of opiate dependency.
- Recognizes opiate
addiction as a central nervous system
disorder, caused by continuous opiate intake.
- Answers the depletion of natural endorphins
in nerve cells due to an external supply
of opiate.
- Reverses
a patient’s
physical opiate dependency without unnecessary
suffering, fear, or shame.
- Surpasses conventional detoxification procedures
that require a painful and debilitating withdrawal( ii ) and
that also demonstrate low success rates.( iii )
- Does not participate
in opiate replacement treatment, or substitute
a legal, prescribed dependency (such as Methadone
or Suboxone ® ( iv )(Subutex ®)
).
- Has successfully treated thousands of patients
physically addicted to opiates, from Europe,
Middle East, Asia, Australia, South America,
and North America.
- Receives
patients weekly from all over the world
in a fully accredited medical hospital
located in Orange County, CA.
( i ) Known opiate-based
prescription painkillers include OxyContin®, MS
Contin®, Suboxone® (Buprenorphine), Methadone, Vicodin®, Darvocet®, Percocet®, hydrocodone, tramadol or
any other opioids, similar to codeine, morphine,
and heroin.
(
ii ) Sudden abstinence from opiates induces
yet another traumatic disorder known as ‘withdrawal
syndrome’.
( iii ) Statistics
show that one year following conventional
detoxification, the vast majority of patients
have relapsed.
(
iv ) Or other new opiate-replacement drugs
reaching today's market.
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