If you’re struggling with heroin or prescription painkillers, you may feel trapped.
You may wake up each day promising yourself you’ll stop. You may try to quit on your own. Then the withdrawal symptoms hit and everything feels impossible.
Opioid withdrawal can feel overwhelming. The fear of those symptoms keeps many people stuck in the cycle.
The good news is this: you do not have to detox alone.
At Rocky Mountain Treatment Center in Great Falls, Montana, medically monitored opioid detox gives you a safe and supportive place to begin recovery. Here, you are treated with dignity and compassion — many of the staff members have lived experience in recovery themselves.
Let’s talk about how opioid detox works and why medical supervision matters.
Understanding Opioid Withdrawal
Opioids include substances like:
- Heroin
- Oxycodone (OxyContin)
- Hydrocodone (Vicodin)
- Morphine
- Fentanyl
These drugs attach to receptors in your brain that control pain and pleasure. Over time, your brain adapts. It becomes dependent on opioids to function normally.
When you stop using them, your body reacts.
Common Opioid Withdrawal Symptoms
Withdrawal symptoms can begin within:
- 6–12 hours for short-acting opioids like heroin
- 24–48 hours for long-acting prescription opioids
Symptoms may include:
- Muscle aches
- Sweating
- Nausea and vomiting
- Diarrhea
- Anxiety
- Insomnia
- Intense cravings
Opioid withdrawal is usually not life-threatening, but it can feel extremely painful and distressing.
According to the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA), relapse rates are high when people attempt detox without medical support because the discomfort becomes too difficult to manage.
This is why safe, medically monitored detox makes a difference.
The Opioid Crisis in Montana
Montana has seen a sharp increase in opioid-related harm in recent years.
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), opioid-involved overdose deaths have increased significantly nationwide, and fentanyl continues to drive many of these deaths.
Rural states like Montana face additional challenges:
- Limited treatment access
- Long travel distances
- Stigma around addiction
- Transportation barriers
If you live in a rural Montana community, it may feel like help is out of reach.
At Rocky Mountain Treatment Center, those barriers are addressed with:
- Same-day admissions
- Complimentary pickup throughout Montana
- A structured, 26-bed inpatient setting in Great Falls
When you are ready for help, support is available.
Why You Should Not Detox Alone
Many people try to detox at home. They want privacy. They want to “power through” it.
But opioid withdrawal can lead to:
- Severe dehydration
- Heart rate changes
- Intense psychological distress
- Rapid relapse due to cravings
Relapse after a period of abstinence can be especially dangerous. Tolerance drops quickly. If you use the same amount as before detox, your risk of overdose increases significantly.
The Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA) explains that medically supervised withdrawal improves safety and increases the likelihood that individuals will continue into long-term treatment.
Detox is safer, and more effective, with medical supervision.
What to Expect During Opioid Detox at Rocky Mountain Treatment Center
Fear of the unknown keeps many people from taking the first step. Knowing what happens during detox can ease that fear.
A Compassionate Welcome
You are not judged here.
More than 80% of the staff at Rocky Mountain Treatment Center are in recovery themselves. They understand the fear, the cravings, and the shame that often come with opioid addiction.
You are met with understanding, not criticism.
A Full Medical Assessment
Your detox begins with a thorough evaluation. The medical team reviews:
- Your opioid use history
- Other substances used
- Physical health conditions
- Mental health symptoms
- Past detox experiences
This helps create a detox plan tailored specifically to you.
24/7 Medical Monitoring
During detox, medical professionals monitor:
- Vital signs
- Hydration levels
- Sleep patterns
- Emotional state
Medications may be used to ease withdrawal symptoms and reduce cravings.
These medications are carefully administered and monitored to support safety and comfort.
You are never left alone to suffer through symptoms.
Managing Cravings and Emotional Symptoms
Opioid withdrawal is not just physical. It affects your emotions and thinking.
You may experience:
- Depression
- Irritability
- Hopelessness
- Anxiety
Some individuals report strong cravings within the first few days of detox.
Medical supervision helps stabilize both body and mind. Clinical staff provide emotional support while your system begins to adjust.
This early stabilization increases the chances that you will move forward into treatment instead of returning to use.
Detox Is Only the Beginning of Recovery
Detox clears opioids from your body. It does not address why you began using them.
The National Institute on Drug Abuse states that detox alone is rarely sufficient for long-term recovery. Ongoing therapy and structured treatment are essential.
At Rocky Mountain Treatment Center, detox transitions directly into a 30-day intensive inpatient program.
After detox, you begin working on:
- Individual counseling
- Group therapy
- Co-occurring disorder treatment
- Family counseling and Family Week programming
- Holistic therapies
You begin exploring the root causes of addiction, trauma, chronic stress, depression, anxiety, or pain, in a safe and supportive setting.
Healing in a Unique Montana Setting
Rocky Mountain Treatment Center offers personalized care in a small, structured environment.
Low Client-to-Staff Ratio
With only 26 beds, you receive individual attention. Your treatment plan is customized to your needs.
Equine-Assisted Therapy
Rocky Mountain is the only addiction treatment program in Montana offering equine-assisted therapy.
Working with horses can help you:
- Build trust
- Develop emotional awareness
- Improve communication
- Strengthen confidence
Experiential therapy can reach emotional areas that traditional talk therapy sometimes cannot.
Whole-Person Healing
Recovery may also include:
- Recreational therapy
- Nutrition guidance
- Spiritual programming (optional and respectful of personal beliefs)
- Nature-based activities
Healing is not just about stopping opioids. It’s about rebuilding your life.
Aftercare and Long-Term Support
Recovery continues after inpatient treatment ends.
Rocky Mountain Treatment Center provides:
- Aftercare planning
- Weekly Zoom group therapy
- Alumni events
- Ongoing case management
Research shows that continued engagement in recovery support improves long-term outcomes (NIDA).
You remain connected. You remain supported.
If You’re Afraid, That’s Normal
Opioid detox can feel intimidating.
You may fear:
- The pain of withdrawal
- Relapse
- Judgment
- Failure
At Rocky Mountain Treatment Center, you are treated with compassion. Many staff members have stood where you are standing now.
You deserve safety. You deserve respect. You deserve a real chance at recovery.
Taking the First Step Toward Opioid Recovery in Montana
If heroin or prescription painkillers have taken control of your life, medically monitored detox can provide a safe starting point.
At Rocky Mountain Treatment Center in Great Falls, you can:
- Access same-day admission
- Receive complimentary transportation across Montana
- Detox under 24/7 medical supervision
- Transition directly into structured inpatient treatment
You do not have to do this alone.
Recovery begins with one brave step. Safe detox can be that step.
Sources
- National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA). “Principles of Drug Addiction Treatment.”
https://nida.nih.gov/publications/principles-drug-addiction-treatment-research-based-guide-third-edition - Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). “Drug Overdose Deaths.”
https://www.cdc.gov/drugoverdose - Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration (SAMHSA). “TIP 45: Detoxification and Substance Abuse Treatment.”
https://store.samhsa.gov - Montana Department of Public Health and Human Services – Opioid Data
https://dphhs.mt.gov



