![]() The rankings, for which Newsweek collaborated with leading data collection and analysis firm Statista for the third consecutive year, are based on a survey of over 4,000 medical professionals and an analysis of the treatment centers' accreditation status. 31, 2022 /PRNewswire/ - Recovery Unplugged Treatment Centers is pleased and excited to announce that it has ranked in Newsweek's Top 10 Addiction Treatment Centers for 2022 in two locations! The facility in Fort Lauderdale and the newest treatment center in Nashville took top honors in the states of Florida and Tennessee, respectively. Reach Elaina Sauber at 61 or follow on Twitter.FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla., Aug. People with a history of violent behaviors, sexual offenses or active suicidal thoughts are not accepted into the program. It also employs court liaisons to advocate for patients charged with nonviolent drug offenses who are facing jail time. The program accepts most private insurance programs, and is licensed to administer Vivitrol to help mitigate symptoms of opioid withdrawal. The Brentwood facility will be staffed 24 hours a day and serve 35 to 45 people at a time. Patients at Recovery Unplugged typically stay for about a month and a half. "Music triggers our emotions. It calms our fears, opens up another part of us, and it heals and fixes what’s broken," Supa said. Those tools are important pieces of the recovery puzzle once a person leaves treatment. Other clients said the performance-based aspect of the program helped introduce them to feelings of self-efficacy, or a person's belief in their ability to reach a goal. It was also described as helping with depression and can help patients overcome negative emotions when they don't necessarily feel like interacting with others. Patients who participated in a study at Recovery Unplugged's Fort Lauderdale center run by researchers at Nova Southeastern University said the music-based experiences with other clients, both by listening and playing, helped create a sense of community and bonding. ![]() "Once you get them to unfold their arms and communicate, the healing process starts," Supa said. They can also perform music at weekly open-mic sessions. the song can take you back into your disease and make you relive it, without ever having to pick up the drug."Ī certain tune or lyric can be a nonthreatening tool that helps patients begin to open up. We concentrate on writing songs about the disease, the dark side, the stupid side, the fun side. The infusion of music into other forms of psychotherapy helps chip away at the wall patients put up, Supa said. When patients arrive to rehab, they're often ashamed and hesitant to let down their guard. You're only as sick as your secrets, Supa says. "Music's been used for years in hospital settings for pain and Alzheimer's, so we didn't invent that wheel, but we applied it to addiction, and it's worked wonders," Supa said. ![]() The patients' powerful emotional responses to his songs made Supa realize how impactful music could be on an addicted person's journey back to sobriety.īy 2013, Supa and other creators of the program opened the first Recovery Unplugged center in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. He started playing acoustic sets at addiction treatment and detox centers, singing songs he'd written about his own battles with the disease. Years later, after a successful music career that included a seven-year stint in Nashville, Supa wanted to start helping those who'd lost their way. "A lot of people who heard the song on the radio reached out to us and said that song saved their life," Supa said. The woman's comments from the NA convention are the first lines in the song. Supa's songwriting instincts kicked in, and he called Tyler the next day to tell her what the woman said, and the two wrote "Amazing," about recovering from addiction. She stood up and shared and said, 'All my life, I kept the right ones out and let the wrong ones in.'" ![]()
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