Methamphetamine Rehab Placement — NYC
Stimulant-involved overdose deaths in NYC have risen sharply since 2020, often involving fentanyl contamination (DOHMH). Methamphetamine use disorder typically requires longer inpatient stays than opioid or alcohol use disorder — 60 to 90 days is common. Call (347) 741-7043.
Why meth rehab is longer
Methamphetamine produces substantial changes in dopamine signaling that take months to normalize. The post-acute withdrawal period — anhedonia, anergia, cognitive slowing, depression — can last 30–90 days. Research and clinical experience both support longer inpatient stays for stimulant use disorder. 60-day and 90-day programs are standard recommendations for moderate-to-severe meth use.
Behavioral treatment is the core
No FDA-approved medications exist specifically for methamphetamine use disorder — though contingency management (structured reinforcement schedules) has the strongest evidence base of any intervention. Good inpatient programs integrate contingency management alongside CBT, motivational interviewing, and dual-diagnosis work. Co-occurring depression, ADHD, and bipolar disorder are common and must be treated concurrently.
Meth + sexual health — the NYC context
In NYC, methamphetamine use is significantly intertwined with sexual health — PrEP uptake, HIV prevention, and trauma-informed care are all relevant. LGBTQ+-affirming programs are available and should be requested on the placement call if relevant. Ryan White programs and city-funded HIV services coordinate with SUD treatment across NYC.
Does insurance cover meth rehab?
Yes. Stimulant use disorder is treated under the same NY SUD framework — no preauthorization required for in-network OASAS-certified facilities. Longer stays are typically approved on medical-necessity grounds. Call (347) 741-7043.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need medical detox for meth?
Usually no — meth withdrawal isn't medically dangerous. But inpatient structure during the acute crash is strongly recommended.
Will my insurance approve a 90-day stay?
Medical necessity for longer stays is routinely documented for meth use disorder. NY parity rules support extended care when clinically indicated.