Detox tips for alcohol addiction

Alcohol addiction detox advices and some UK rehab centres ideas? The key to quitting alcohol while avoiding unpleasant withdrawal symptoms is asking for help. If you have decided that it is in your best interest to stop drinking, seek help from your family doctor or primary healthcare provider. There are specific medical treatments that your physician can provide you with that will stop or reduce most of the symptoms you would normally experience if you quit cold turkey.

People who have been drinking or using for longer than six months or so, or who have been binge drinking or using drugs in increasingly high doses over a shorter period of time, will often go through a week or so of feeling quite unwell as if you have a bad dose of the flu. While there are many physical symptoms of withdrawal relating to the use of alcohol, heroin, meth. and more, this article focuses on the emotional side of withdrawal, which tends to accompany withdrawal from any drug or alcohol. In fact, these emotional withdrawal symptoms are even known to occur with behavioral addictions, where no physical substance is taken. The depression that people experience during withdrawal is very usually described as worse than everyday sadness, and is often on a par with clinical depression, although it doesn’t usually last as long. People who have just quit drugs sometimes describe it as an empty, hopeless state, where they feel the opposite of the good feelings they felt when they were drinking or high. It can be accompanied by a lack of energy or enthusiasm for life, and, especially if drinking or drugs were central to your life, can feel a bit scary, like your life ahead is a kind of void without the thrill of getting high or drunk.

If you know you have a drinking problem but aren’t sure how severe it is, or how best to quit, the best thing you can do is simply give us a call on 0203 151 1280 for some friendly advice on alcohol rehab UK and beyond. Some signs you may need rehabilitation include: Hiding alcohol use from close friends or loved ones, or lying about it, Using alcohol to cope with stress or pain, If drinking is affecting your performance at your job or education, Neglecting your personal appearance, Borrowing money or selling possessions to drink, Planning your routine around drinking and always making time for it. You don’t necessarily need all the above signs to be at risk. Even a few of them is cause for concern. The most important thing to remember is alcoholism is an illness, and none of this is your fault. Find extra info at https://www.rehabclinic.org.uk/locations/.

Going ‘cold turkey’ or suddenly drinking no alcohol at all can cause serious alcohol withdrawal symptoms if you were drinking heavily before. Physical alcohol withdrawal symptoms including trembling hands, sweating, headache, nausea, vomiting, palpitations and lack of appetite are less common, but are often a sign that the sufferer was drinking at worrying levels. Severe physical side effects include convulsions, confusion, fever and even hallucinations. If you experience physical withdrawal symptoms of any kind, you should see your doctor as soon as possible. Your doctor may be able to prescribe medication that can help with alcohol withdrawal symptoms, and will be able to refer you to a specialist alcohol team for support. They can also offer counselling and psychological support, and can put you in touch with local support groups to help you stay on track.

Alcoholic hepatitis is when heavy alcohol consumption over a long period of time causes the liver to inflame. Continuing to drink with alcoholic hepatitis is incredibly dangerous and can lead to internal bleeding or liver failure. Treating alcoholism in the long term takes a lot more than a simple detox. Some clients binge drink once or twice a month, some drink daily, and some even wake up and drink first thing every morning. Often we find there are other issues in a person’s life that encourage them to drink, and a therapeutic and holistic approach can help identify these issues and work through them, which provides much more reliable and long term results than a simple detox. This part of treatment is often found to be quite difficult by some patients due to alcohol being a crutch in their life for so long. See additional info on https://www.rehabclinic.org.uk/.