COMING SOON!
WASHINGTON RESOURCE GUIDE
We’re building a free, comprehensive Resource Guide to connect people with trusted recovery services across Washington State.
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This directory will feature up-to-date information:
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Health Care — mental health, physical health, and addiction-related care
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Basic Needs — food, clothing, hygiene, housing, and transportation
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Health Insurance
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Employment & Education
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Legal Support
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Family & Youth Services
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Access & Navigation Resources
INPATIENT TREATMENT GUIDE
In addition to our statewide guide, we’re also developing a dedicated Inpatient Treatment Resource Guide.
This focused directory will make it easier to compare inpatient and residential programs across Washington — including details on:
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Admission criteria
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Insurance acceptance
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Program features - i.e. length of stay, time outside, cell phone usage
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Feedback from individuals who’ve experienced treatment firsthand.
TREATMENT WORKS!
Most people in the U.S. who struggle with substance use don’t get the help they need. But when they receive evidence based treatment, people with substance use disorders have EXCELLENT outcomes. The vast majority recover.


​Recovery takes time—sometimes years—and people often need more than one try. That’s why access to care is so important.​ There’s no one-size-fits-all treatment. Everyone is different and care should be personalized. Addiction care can include therapy, medications, support groups, and help from peers.
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Voices of Recovery is committed to ensuring that anyone seeking help for substance use is informed about all available treatment options and has the support needed to access them.​​
RECOVERY PHILOSOPHY
Recovery is not a single step — it’s a gradual process that unfolds through awareness, support, and connection. It often begins in the catalyst stage, a cycle of accumulating problems, pressures, and triggering events. This stage can feel unsustainable — a constant loop of trying and falling back — until the realization comes that change isn’t possible alone.
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From there, recovery moves toward treatment, where healing takes root. Though recovery looks different for everyone, the foundation remains the same:
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Access to resources and basic needs
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Physical and mental health care
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Addiction and recovery education
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Coping and life skills
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Meaningful and productive activity
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Through treatment, change begins to take shape — fit in beliefs, then in thoughts and behaviors. People start to see addiction as a chronic but treatable condition, develop hope and belief in their ability to recover, and begin to act differently with the help of social support.
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Over time, these changes build stability and confidence. With continued support and connection, individuals move toward stable recovery — a life rooted in purpose, growth, and resilience.




