90-Day Rehab Program at Clarity Wellness
Research consistently shows that 90 days or more in structured treatment produces significantly better outcomes than 30-day programs — especially for fentanyl and methamphetamine dependency. (NIDA, Principles of Drug Addiction Treatment)
Why Longer Treatment Produces Better Outcomes
The neurological and behavioral patterns of addiction don't resolve in 30 days. For patients with severe dependency — particularly to fentanyl or methamphetamine — the brain's reward and motivation systems require months to begin meaningful healing. A 90-day program provides the time needed for genuine stabilization, behavioral change, and sustained recovery.
National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) research findings are consistent across decades of study: treatment duration of 90 days or more is associated with significantly higher rates of sustained sobriety compared to shorter programs. This is not about intensity — it is about giving neurological recovery time.
What's Covered in Months 2 and 3?
The first month typically focuses on medical stabilization (detox, withdrawal management) and early engagement with therapy. Months 2 and 3 go deeper: longer-term therapeutic work on trauma, relationships, and underlying mental health conditions; development of practical life skills and relapse prevention strategies; work on family dynamics and repair of damaged relationships; gradual re-engagement with work or life planning; and transition planning for aftercare.
By the end of 90 days, most patients have achieved stability that would be difficult to reach in 30 days alone. The recovery foundation is meaningfully stronger.
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Placement advisors available 24/7. PPO insurance accepted. No obligation.
Does Insurance Cover 90 Days of Inpatient Rehab?
Under California's SB 855, PPO insurers must cover inpatient addiction treatment based on medical necessity — not arbitrary visit limits. That means extended residential treatment can be covered when clinically indicated.
In practice, insurance authorization for extended stays is reviewed in stages. Initial authorization may cover 7–14 days, with continued authorizations based on clinical progress and ongoing medical necessity. Licensed clinical teams handle this authorization process. Placement advisors verify your plan's specific coverage structure before admission.
Transitioning from 90-Day Residential to Outpatient Care
Discharge planning from a 90-day program is typically more sophisticated than from a 30-day program. Options at discharge may include step-down to partial hospitalization (PHP), intensive outpatient programming (IOP), sober living, outpatient individual therapy, and peer support communities.
Patients discharging from 90 days of residential care often transition directly into structured sober living while continuing outpatient treatment — an approach that supports the critical first six months of sustained recovery.
90-Day Rehab — Common Questions
Yes. Many patients begin with a 30-day authorization and extend based on clinical progress and ongoing medical necessity. Licensed clinical teams assess at regular intervals and work with insurance for continued authorization when appropriate.
No. For some patients with milder presentations and strong support systems, 30 days may be sufficient. For patients with severe fentanyl or meth dependency, significant trauma, or complex co-occurring conditions, 90 days produces meaningfully better outcomes. Licensed clinical teams help determine the right length.
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