
Addiction Treatment
Opioid Addiction Treatment
Oxycodone, hydrocodone, morphine, heroin, fentanyl: different names, one trap. Opioids rewire the brain until using stops being a choice and starts being survival. Millions of Americans are in this fight, and treatment works. Confidential outpatient care in Glendora, with the medical pieces coordinated for you.
Signs of opioid use disorder
Clinicians look for patterns like these. Two or more in the same year is reason to be evaluated, wherever you are on the spectrum from pills to street use.
Loss of control
- Taking more, or for longer, than intended
- Wanting to cut down and not managing to
- Cravings that crowd out everything else
- More and more of the day spent getting, using, recovering
Life consequences
- Falling behind at work, school, or home
- Conflict with people you love over your use
- Dropping activities that used to matter
- Using in situations where it is physically dangerous
The body adapting
- Tolerance: the same amount no longer works
- Withdrawal: aches, nausea, sweats, anxiety when stopping
- Using again mainly to keep withdrawal away
- Escalating from pills to stronger opioids to stay ahead of it
How we treat opioid addiction
Modern opioid treatment stands on two legs: medication where it helps, and therapy that rebuilds the life around it. We coordinate the medical leg with trusted outside providers and deliver the therapy here, as one connected plan.
Partial Hospitalization (PHP)
Full treatment days, up to five days a week, home each night. The strongest platform for early recovery, right after detox or stabilization.
Learn moreIntensive Outpatient (IOP)
Day, evening, and weekend options around work and family. Craving skills, relapse prevention, and steady accountability as normal life resumes.
Learn moreOutpatient & Aftercare
Weekly therapy and alumni support for the long haul, because opioid recovery is strongest when support outlasts the cravings.
Learn moreDual Diagnosis Care
Chronic pain, trauma, depression, and anxiety drive much opioid use. We treat them in the same plan, so the reason you used gets as much care as the using.
Learn moreAbout medication-assisted treatment (MAT): medications like buprenorphine (Suboxone), methadone, and naltrexone are the best-studied tools in opioid recovery. They cut cravings and lower overdose risk, and using them is recovery, not a shortcut. We do not prescribe them ourselves; we coordinate with outside MAT prescribers and provide medication monitoring support alongside your therapy. Medically supervised detox, if you need it first, is coordinated the same way. And always: a suspected overdose means naloxone if you have it and 911 immediately.
Get Help
Who are you here for?
A few quick taps, completely confidential. Answer right here on the page.
Why people choose Glendora Recovery Center
A small, family-style center on the practical side of the opioid crisis.
One plan, all the pieces
Detox referral, MAT coordination, therapy, family work, and aftercare, held together by one clinical team instead of scattered across providers.
People who have been there
Members of our clinical team are in recovery themselves. Opioid recovery is personal here, not theoretical.
Accredited, licensed care
Joint Commission accredited and DHCS licensed, with evidence-based therapies like CBT and DBT alongside art and yoga therapy.
MAT-friendly, stigma-free
If buprenorphine or methadone is part of your recovery, you will never be treated as less sober here. The evidence is on your side, and so are we.
Fast, confidential admission
Admissions is answered 24/7, insurance is verified free, and same-day admission is often available. Protected by 42 CFR Part 2 and HIPAA.
English and Spanish
Care in the language you think in, for you and for your family.
In-network with most major PPO plans
We work with most PPO and HMO insurance. Not sure about yours? We will check for free.
We do not accept Medi-Cal at this time.
- Most PPO plans cover treatmentOften most or all of the cost.
- Free verification in minutesWe call you back with a clear answer.
- 100% confidentialPrivate, with no obligation.


Plus most other PPO plans. Not sure about yours? We check for free.
Frequently Asked Questions
Straight answers to the questions we hear most. Anything else? Call us, day or night.
What exactly counts as an opioid?
Prescription painkillers like oxycodone (OxyContin, Percocet), hydrocodone (Vicodin, Norco), morphine, and codeine; the street drugs heroin and illicit fentanyl; and treatment medications like methadone and buprenorphine, which are opioids used carefully to treat addiction. They all act on the same receptors, which is why dependence follows the same path across the class.
Is medication-assisted treatment just swapping one drug for another?
No, and this myth costs lives. Buprenorphine and methadone, properly prescribed, stabilize the brain chemistry opioids disrupted, without the highs and lows that drive the addiction cycle. People on MAT work, parent, and live fully. We coordinate MAT with outside prescribers and pair it with therapy, which is where the deeper change happens.
Do I have to get off my pain medication to work with you?
Not necessarily. Legitimate pain needs treatment too. If your use has stayed medical, your prescriber remains in charge of it. If it has crossed into something that scares you, we help untangle pain management from addiction, in coordination with medical providers. That untangling is a specialty of dual diagnosis care.
Do I need detox before starting treatment?
Many people coming off opioids do, because withdrawal, while rarely life threatening on its own, is intense enough to derail unsupported quitting. We do not provide detox on site. We assess your situation on the first call, connect you with medically supervised detox or a MAT prescriber as appropriate, and reserve your place in our program.
What should I keep at home if someone I love uses opioids?
Naloxone (Narcan). It reverses opioid overdose long enough for help to arrive, it is available at California pharmacies without a personal prescription, and it saves lives. If you ever use it, still call 911 immediately; naloxone wears off before many opioids do.
Does insurance cover opioid addiction treatment?
Most major PPO and HMO plans cover it. We verify your benefits for free, usually in minutes, with no obligation. We do not accept Medi-Cal at this time.
You do not have to do this alone.
Reach out today. Every call is confidential, and there is no pressure, just help.