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What to Expect in Drug Detox

Fear of withdrawal is the single most common reason people delay seeking help. Here's an honest, detailed account of what medical detox actually looks and feels like — so you can walk in prepared rather than afraid. Call (732) 523-5239 anytime to ask questions before you arrive.

Arrival and Intake (Hour 0–2)

When you arrive at Hope Harbor's Cherry Hill center, you'll be greeted by an admissions counselor and clinical staff. The intake process includes:

  • Medical history and current medications review
  • Substance use history — what you use, how much, how long, when you last used
  • Vital signs (blood pressure, heart rate, temperature, oxygen levels)
  • Mental health screening and safety assessment
  • Urine drug screen to confirm substances in your system
  • Review of belongings (prohibited items: alcohol, drugs, sharp objects)
  • Review of program rules and patient rights
  • Assignment to your room and introduction to floor staff

Intake typically takes 1–2 hours. Clinical staff are matter-of-fact and non-judgmental — they've heard every story and their job is to help you, not evaluate you.

The First 24 Hours

The first day is focused on stabilization. Depending on your substances and last use time, withdrawal symptoms may already be present or beginning to emerge. Nursing staff check your vitals frequently — often every 2–4 hours in the first day. Withdrawal-management medications are administered on a protocol designed for your specific situation.

What this actually feels like varies by substance:

  • Opioid withdrawal (hours 6–24 after last use): Anxiety, restlessness, muscle aches, runny nose, sweating, yawning, goosebumps, insomnia. Buprenorphine or clonidine significantly reduces these symptoms when properly timed.
  • Alcohol withdrawal (hours 6–24): Tremors, anxiety, elevated blood pressure and heart rate, sweating. Benzodiazepines are administered to prevent escalation to seizures. Vitals are monitored closely.
  • Benzo withdrawal (days 1–3): Anxiety, insomnia, tremors. A careful taper protocol begins immediately.
  • Stimulant "crash" (hours 0–48): Profound fatigue, depression, hypersomnia. Supportive care — sleep, nutrition, monitoring.

Days 2–5: Acute Withdrawal

This is typically the most intense period. Opioid withdrawal peaks at 36–72 hours. Alcohol withdrawal's most dangerous window (DTs) is 48–72 hours — this is why continuous monitoring matters most in this window. Your clinical team is observing and adjusting medications throughout.

Most patients begin to feel meaningfully better by days 3–5. Sleep improves. Appetite returns. The physical grip of withdrawal begins to loosen. Group therapy and individual sessions may begin once you're medically stable — usually days 2–3 for most patients.

What Happens After Detox Completes

Completing detox is not the finish line — it's the starting line. Your clinical team will have been building your aftercare plan throughout your detox stay. Before discharge, you'll meet with your counselor to review your recommended next level of care:

  • Inpatient rehab — for those needing residential structure
  • PHP — intensive day treatment with stable home
  • IOP — structured outpatient care
  • MAT continuation — buprenorphine or naltrexone follow-on

Do not leave detox without a clear next step. The first 72 hours after detox completion are among the highest-risk moments in recovery — opioid tolerance has dropped significantly, and relapse at previous doses is frequently fatal.

Questions about what to expect? Our Cherry Hill team can walk you through the entire detox process before you arrive. Call (732) 523-5239 — confidential, no obligation.

Frequently Asked Questions

Ready to Start Recovery? Our Cherry Hill Team is Available 24/7.

Free, confidential assessments. Insurance accepted. Same-day intake available.

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