Substance Use Disorders

If you or someone you care about is struggling to stop using a substance, help is available. We offer evidence-based therapies and personalized treatment plans.

What Is Drug Addiction (Substance Use Disorder)?

Substance use disorder (SUD)—often called addiction—is a chronic, treatable medical condition in which alcohol, medications, nicotine, cannabis, opioids, or other drugs are used in a problematic pattern that harms health, safety, or daily life. The brain’s reward, stress, and self-control systems change over time, making it hard to cut back despite negative consequences. Some people develop SUD after recreational use; others after prescribed exposure (e.g., opioid pain medicines). Risk and speed of addiction vary by substance (opioids tend to carry higher, faster risk).

Not everyone who uses a substance becomes addicted. Genetics, mental health, environment, and age of first use all influence risk.

Common Signs and Symptoms

Our holistic approach addresses the mind, body, and spirit - supporting your journey to healing and long-term recovery.

We integrate Functional Psychiatry into practice alongside traditional methods

Recognizing Unhealthy Use in a Loved One

Red flags can include: sudden friend changes; secrecy or isolation; declining performance at work/school; missed appointments; mood swings; disorganized sleep or eating; neglect of hygiene; unexplained money issues or missing items.

Why SUD Develops (Risk Factors)

Prevention & Harm Reduction

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Complications

Diagnosis of SUD

A clinician reviews medical and mental health history, substance use patterns, prescription monitoring data when appropriate, physical exam, and lab/drug testing as indicated. Diagnosis is based on DSM-5 criteria (the 11 symptoms above) and degree of functional impact. Co-occurring conditions are routinely assessed.

Treatment (Evidence-Based and Individualized)

Best outcomes come from combining medications (when indicated) with behavioral therapies, matched to the person’s needs and level of care (outpatient, intensive outpatient/partial hospital, residential, or inpatient).

Withdrawal Management (“Detox”)

Medically supervised stabilization to relieve withdrawal and begin treatment planning. For alcohol and benzodiazepines, supervised care may be life-saving. Detox is a first step—not a stand-alone cure.

Medications for SUD

  • Opioid use disorder: methadone, buprenorphine, naltrexone
  • Alcohol use disorder: naltrexone, acamprosate, disulfiram
  • Tobacco use disorder: nicotine replacement (patch/spray/gum/lozenge), bupropion, varenicline
    These reduce cravings, normalize brain signaling, and lower relapse/overdose risk. (There are no FDA-approved medications for stimulant or cannabis use disorders; targeted symptom management and behavioral therapies are used.)

Therapies and Supports

  • Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT), Motivational Interviewing (MI/MET)
  • Contingency Management (CM) (structured incentives)
  • Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT) for emotion regulation
  • Family therapy and assertive community treatment (ACT) where appropriate
  • Mutual-help/peer support (e.g., NA, SMART Recovery) as adjuncts
  • Integrated care for dual diagnosis (mental health + SUD) is essential

Ongoing Care

Relapse can be part of recovery; it signals the need to adjust the plan, not to stop treatment. Regular follow-up, medication adherence, therapy, recovery supports, and attention to sleep, exercise, nutrition, and stress all improve outcomes.

Therapist guiding a patient through mental health therapy.

When to Seek Help

Talk with a healthcare professional if you’re using regularly, struggling to cut down, or noticing the signs above. Seek emergency care for suspected overdose or severe withdrawal.

Vivabest Psychiatry PLLC: Our Approach

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