Whatever the substance — stimulants, opioids, cannabis, prescription medication or a mix — you will be met here as a person, not a diagnosis, and supported with real clinical care.
I've worked in addiction treatment long enough to know that no one chooses dependency. It usually begins as a solution — to pain, exhaustion, anxiety, pressure — and slowly becomes the bigger problem. By the time people write to us, most have spent years managing, hiding and bargaining. My first promise as clinical director is simple: nobody here will shame you. Shame is not a treatment; it's one of the reasons people stay stuck.
Our drug program is built for international guests and adapts to the substance and the person. Stimulant dependency, opioid dependency, cannabis, benzodiazepines, sleeping pills, party drugs, or combinations — each follows a different physical and psychological course, and the clinical plan reflects that. What stays constant is the environment: a calm, private setting a long way from dealers, group chats and old routines, where your only job is to recover.
This program is for adults whose substance use has outgrown their control — whether that looks like daily use, escalating doses, failed attempts to stop, or a life that has quietly narrowed around obtaining and using. It is also for people on long-term prescription medication who feel trapped by it. Some guests arrive in crisis; others arrive functional on the outside and exhausted on the inside. Both belong here.
The first days are deliberately gentle, especially if detox is involved: rest, medical checks, light food, sleep. As your body stabilises, the therapeutic schedule builds — a morning practice, individual session, group circle after lunch, then wellness work or quiet time. We pay particular attention to sleep and nutrition, because bodies recovering from substances need rebuilding, not just abstinence. By week three or four, most guests are surprised by how much capacity for ordinary life has returned.
If you're reading this for yourself, one message starts a confidential conversation. If you're reading it for someone you love, our guide on helping a loved one with addiction is a good place to start, and admissions explains every step.
If you or someone you love is in immediate danger or medical crisis, call local emergency services now. This website is informational and not a substitute for professional medical advice.