- Stimulant addiction treatment · Cedar Rapids, Iowa
Stimulant Addiction Treatment in Iowa
Radix Recovery provides stimulant addiction treatment in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, for cocaine, crack, methamphetamine, and prescription stimulants like Adderall and Ritalin. There is no FDA-approved medication for stimulant use disorder, so our program is built on the behavioral therapies with the strongest evidence: contingency management, CBT, and motivational interviewing, with medically monitored care through the crash phase. If you or your loved one is ready to stop, we can typically arrange admission within 24 hours.
24/7 nursing
Same-day admission often available
Most insurance accepted
The reality, in brief
Dopamine
The shared mechanism
Every stimulant, illicit or prescribed, floods the brain’s reward circuitry with dopamine
No FDA pill
For the disorder itself
Stimulant use disorder has no approved medication; the treatment is behavioral
0-24 hrs
To the crash
Withdrawal inverts the high into exhaustion, depression, and cravings
Therapy-led
What actually works
Contingency management leads, with CBT and motivational interviewing
- Iowa Department of Public Health Licensed
- LegitScript Certified
- Joint Commission Accredited
- Stimulant treatment at a glance
What to Expect, in Numbers
0-24 hrs
Until the crash begins The stimulant crash typically starts within the first 24 hours after the last use: exhaustion, hypersomnia, low mood, and strong cravings.
3-7 days
Typical medical stabilization stay The deepest fatigue and depression dominate days 1 to 7. Our team monitors mood and safety around the clock through this window.
24/7
Nursing and monitoring Round-the-clock nursing with a dedicated detox team, separate from our residential staff, including suicide-risk screening during the crash.
< 24 hrs
Typical admission timeline Same-day to next-day admission whenever a bed is available. One call starts the process.
- Aetna
- BlueCross BlueShield
- Cigna
- UnitedHealthcare
- Wellmark
- Iowa Medicaid
- Understanding stimulant addiction
Are Stimulants Addictive?
Yes. Every drug in the stimulant category, from cocaine and methamphetamine to prescription medications like Adderall and Ritalin, works by flooding the brain’s reward circuitry with dopamine. According to the National Institute on Drug Abuse, repeated stimulant use rewires how the brain processes reward, motivation, and stress, producing tolerance, compulsive use, and cravings that persist long after the last dose (NIDA). Stimulant addiction is less about dramatic physical withdrawal and more about a brain that has learned to need the drug to feel normal, focused, or even awake.
That includes medications that started as a legitimate prescription. Prescription stimulants are Schedule II controlled substances for a reason: when they are taken in higher doses, taken without a prescription, or crushed and snorted, their addiction potential rises sharply. Many of the people we treat never touched an illicit drug. Their stimulant dependence began with a pill bottle, a deadline, or someone else’s ADHD medication. Wherever yours began, the treatment path is the same, and it works.
Fast and short-acting
Cocaine & crack cocaine
Long-acting
Methamphetamine
Prescription stimulant
Adderall & amphetamines
Prescription stimulant
Ritalin & methylphenidates
- Stimulant withdrawal timeline
What Does the Stimulant Crash Feel Like?
- The crash
- 0 to 24 hours
The high inverts into the crash
- Deep fatigue
- Days 1 to 7
Depression and exhaustion deepen
- Normalizing
- Weeks 2 to 4
The system starts to repair
- PAWS
- Months 1 and beyond
The long tail of recovery
Withdrawal timeline based on clinical guidance from the National Institute on Drug Abuse and SAMHSA’s Treatment of Stimulant Use Disorders guidance, including its recommendation for suicide-risk screening during stimulant withdrawal. Individual experiences vary with the specific stimulant, use pattern, and overall health.
- The honest clinical picture
Is There a Medication That Treats Stimulant Addiction?
No.
There is no FDA-approved medication for stimulant use disorder.
Opioid use disorder has medications like Suboxone and Vivitrol. Stimulant use disorder has no equivalent, and any treatment center that implies otherwise is not being straight with you. NIDA confirms this plainly (NIDA), and that single fact shapes how honest stimulant treatment is built. The medications we do use are supportive, not curative; the real engine of recovery is structured, evidence-based therapy delivered consistently over time.
- What carries the weight instead
- Through the crash
Supportive care
- Non-addictive only
Comfort medications
Short-term sleep aids that do not feed a new dependence, non-habit-forming support for anxiety and agitation, and an antidepressant evaluation when crash depression persists beyond the expected window.
- One integrated plan
Dual diagnosis evaluation
Every resident is evaluated for stimulant-induced anxiety and depression, underlying mood disorders, and ADHD, then treated as one plan through our dual diagnosis treatment program, not referred out.
- Take the first step
You Do Not Have to White-Knuckle the Crash Alone
One confidential call connects you with a team that knows exactly what the next 7 days look like, and how to get you through them.
- How we treat stimulant addiction
Behavioral Therapy: The Evidence-Based Core
- The therapies with the strongest evidence
CM
Contingency management
CBT
Cognitive behavioral therapy
MI
Motivational interviewing
Dual diagnosis
Stimulants and your mental health: treating both together
Heavy stimulant use produces its own anxiety, panic, paranoia, and crash depression. Just as often, something came first: depression self-medicated with energy, social anxiety quieted by the confidence of a pill, or untreated ADHD. SAMHSA reports that millions of American adults live with co-occurring mental health and substance use disorders. We screen every resident for anxiety, depression, and ADHD during stabilization, and our dual diagnosis team treats both together, one team and one plan. For ADHD specifically, that means an honest clinical evaluation and an attention-symptom strategy that does not hand the addiction back its drug of choice. Learn more about our dual diagnosis treatment program.
- After the crash
How Do You Treat Stimulant Addiction Long-Term?
Medical detox and supervised stabilization You are here
- 3 to 7 days
Residential inpatient
- 30, 60, or 90 days
Partial hospitalization (PHP)
- Day treatment
Intensive outpatient (IOP)
- 3 days per week
Standard outpatient and continuing care
- Ongoing
Alumni and aftercare
- For life
Long-term connection to the alumni community, recovery events, and a team that picks up the phone before finals week, not after.
- Serving All of Iowa
Stimulant Addiction Treatment for Residents across Iowa
Radix Recovery is located in Cedar Rapids, but our residents come from every corner of the state. We serve adults from Des Moines, Iowa City, Waterloo, Cedar Falls, Davenport, the Quad Cities, Dubuque, Sioux City, Council Bluffs, and communities throughout Iowa.
For many residents, receiving treatment outside their home city is a clinical advantage. Distance from familiar environments, triggers, and routines creates space for deeper focus on recovery. Our admissions team helps coordinate travel logistics and can often complete the intake process within 24 hours.
If you are searching for drug rehab near Des Moines or anywhere else in Iowa, our team is ready to help you understand your options and get started.
- Eastern Iowa
Our Location
~30 min
~1.5 hrs
~1.5 hrs
~1.5 hrs
~10 min
- Central Iowa
~2 hrs
~2 hrs
~2 hrs
~1.5 hrs
- Northern Iowa
~1 hr
~1 hr
- Western Iowa
~3.5 hrs
~3 hrs
- Recovery stories
Why Families Trust Radix Recovery
- Stimulant treatment FAQ
Your Questions, Answered
Are stimulants addictive?
Is there a medication that treats stimulant addiction?
Are stimulants physically or psychologically addictive?
What is the stimulant crash, and how long does it last?
Can people with ADHD get addicted to stimulants?
How do you treat stimulant addiction without medication?
Do I need medical detox for stimulant withdrawal?
What types of stimulant addiction does Radix Recovery treat?
Does insurance cover stimulant addiction treatment in Iowa?
How long is stimulant rehab at Radix Recovery?
- Medically Reviewed By
Kayla Borja Frost
- LMHC
- IADC
- Clinical accuracy you can trust
- Clinically reviewed
Last Reviewed
June 2026
Reviewed By
Radix Recovery clinical leadership
- Ready when you are
Take the First Step Toward Life After Stimulants
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- FREE ASSESSMENT
- NO COMMITMENT
- AVAILABLE 24/7