Why residential treatment is the right starting point for complex cases
For people living with moderate to severe substance use disorder, particularly those managing co-occurring mental health conditions, residential treatment offers something that outpatient programs structurally can’t. An immersive, protected environment where real clinical work can begin without the constant pressures of everyday triggers, unstable routines, or unsafe relationships.
Arrow Health is a registered private psychiatric hospital, not just a standard rehabilitation facility. The distinction has direct clinical and medical implications. Residents have access to 24/7 nursing care, on-site medical support, and psychiatric oversight from what we consider to be the leading addiction psychiatrists practising in Australia. For complex presentations (dual diagnosis, polysubstance use, trauma histories, or significant physical dependence) that level of support is not a luxury, it’s a necessity.
The inpatient program typically runs from four to twelve weeks with the duration tailored to each person’s presentation and progress. Research is consistent on this point: longer treatment duration is associated with better post-treatment outcomes. A 2026 multi-site randomised controlled trial that was conducted across five Victorian treatment services (including Arrow Health) found that longer residential treatment predicted significantly higher odds of abstinence at follow-up. (Garfield et al., Substance Abuse and Rehabilitation, 2026.)
What Arrow Health’s inpatient program actually delivers
A therapeutic community model built on clinical depth
Arrow Health operates on a therapeutic community (TC) model. This isn’t a generic term, it describes a specific, evidence-supported approach in which the treatment environment itself is a primary tool for behaviour change. Residents work alongside peers navigating similar challenges in structured group and individual therapy, within a community that mirrors the relational dynamics of real life.
The TC model is particularly well suited to the complexities of addiction because it addresses the behaviour identity and relationship patterns, not just substance use in isolation. It creates the conditions for people to practise healthier ways of communication, managing conflict, tolerating discomfort, and building trust, all within a supported setting where clinicians are watching, guiding, and adjusting.
Trauma informed, evidence-based clinical care
Substance use disorder often exists and is associated with a person’s history. Anxiety, unresolved trauma, shame, and early adverse experiences are common drivers of the kind of chronic dysregulation that alcohol or other substances can temporarily relieve. Treating the substance use without addressing what sits underneath it has a predictable outcome.
Arrow Health’s clinician team: counsellors, psychologists, facilitators, and our consulting psychiatrists, work from a trauma-informed framework. That means looking past behaviour to understand function. What is this person’s substance use doing for them, and what needs to change before they can sustainably live without it?
Family inclusion as a clinical priority
Addiction doesn’t happen in isolation from family systems, and recovery rarely succeeds without addressing them. Arrow Health’s structured family support program, delivered by experienced, professionally trained family therapists with deep expertise in addiction and trauma, can work with families and loved ones in parallel with the resident’s treatment.
The family program provides psychoeducation, communication skills, boundary setting, and a safe space to process grief, fear, and the slow rebuilding of trust. For
Psychiatric oversight that completes the clinical picture
Many people entering residential addiction treatment have an undiagnosed or undertreated psychiatric condition running alongside their substance use. Anxiety disorders, depression, ADHD, PTSD, and personality disorders are common and they complicate recovery significantly if left unaddressed.
Access to specialist psychiatric care is a genuine differentiator for Arrow Health. It means that residents can receive accurate dual diagnosis assessment, appropriate medication review, and psychiatric treatment within the same program. Not just as a referral somewhere else, but part of an integrated team that works as a collective.
What the research tells us about residential treatment outcomes
A 2026 randomised controlled trial published in Substance Abuse and Rehabilitation (a peer reviewed journal), recruited participants from five Victorian addiction treatment services, including Arrow Health, to study relapse prevention following residential AUD treatment. The study found that residential treatment produced substantial clinical improvements : analyses of alcohol consumption, AUD severity, and other outcomes suggested significant average improvements following rehabilitation. The authors noted that almost half of participants no longer met DSM-5 diagnostic criteria for AUD at six-month follow up, a clinically meaningful outcome given the severity of participants’ alcohol use disorder at entry. (Garfield et al., Substance Abuse and Rehabilitation, 2026.)
Arrow Health’s participation in this research reflects a commitment to operating at the intersection of clinical practice and evidence. We are not simply a treatment provider, we are an active contributor to the growing body of knowledge about what works in addiction recovery in Australia.
Why long-term recovery requires more than a program
The most important thing families and individuals need to understand about residential treatment is that discharge isn’t the finish line. It’s the point where the real work begins.
The inpatient period creates the conditions for change. Safety, insight, skills, and a re-orientation of values. Sustaining that change in the real world requires ongoing support, and it requires the family system to have shifted enough to support rather than inadvertently undermine what has been built.
Arrow Health’s aftercare program and continued engagement from the family support team mean that the clinical relationship does not end at the bottom of the driveway. Residents leave with a plan, access to their treatment team, and the knowledge that Arrow Health’s community remains available to them.
Recovery isn’t a linear path. Setbacks happen. What distinguishes people who achieve sustained recovery isn’t the absence of difficult moments, it’s having the right support, the right tools, and the right people around them when those moments come.
