Substance Abuse & Addiction Treatment in Monmouth County, NJ
Understanding Substance Abuse Disorder
Substance use disorders affect millions of Americans, and recovery is possible with the right support and the right level of care. At Kolli Psychiatry in Red Bank, we understand that addiction rarely exists in isolation. Substance use often overlaps with depression, anxiety, ADHD, trauma, sleep problems, chronic stress, and relationship or work strain—and when those underlying drivers aren’t addressed, it’s harder to sustain change.
Our team provides comprehensive psychiatric evaluations to understand your symptoms, patterns of use, triggers, and goals, and to identify any co-occurring mental health conditions that may be contributing to cravings or relapse.
We then create a personalized plan that may include outpatient treatment recommendations, medication management when appropriate, and coordination with therapy and higher levels of care (such as IOP or residential programs) when needed. Whether you’re early in the process or restarting after setbacks, we focus on practical next steps, safety, and steady progress—so you can move forward with a clear plan and real support.
What Makes Addiction Treatment Different at Kolli Psychiatry?
Many psychiatrists treat substance use disorders as standalone issues, but recovery requires addressing the underlying mental health conditions that often drive or complicate addiction. Our providers specialize in dual diagnosis treatment—simultaneously managing substance use disorders and co-occurring psychiatric conditions.
Our Comprehensive Approach:
Integrated Dual Diagnosis Care: Treating addiction alongside depression, anxiety, ADHD, bipolar disorder, trauma, and other conditions
Medication-Assisted Treatment: Evidence-based medications to support recovery from opioid and alcohol use disorders
Personalized Treatment Plans: Tailored to your specific substances, mental health needs, and life circumstances
Coordination of Care: Working with therapists, support groups, and other providers for comprehensive recovery support
Types of Eating Disorders
Alcohol Use Disorder
The most prevalent substance use disorder in New Jersey, affecting professionals, parents, and individuals across all demographics in Monmouth County communities like Rumson, Holmdel, Middletown, and beyond.
Signs you might need support:
- Drinking more or longer than intended
- Unsuccessful attempts to cut down
- Spending significant time obtaining, using, or recovering from alcohol
- Continued use despite relationship or work problems
- Withdrawal symptoms when not drinking
Opioid Use Disorder
Whether involving prescription painkillers or illicit opioids, this disorder requires specialized medical support for safe recovery.
Treatment approaches:
- Medication-assisted treatment (MAT) with buprenorphine or naltrexone
- Coordination with addiction specialists
- Management of co-occurring mental health conditions
- Long-term relapse prevention planning
Cannabis Use Disorder
While marijuana is increasingly accepted, some individuals develop problematic patterns of use that interfere with daily functioning.
When cannabis becomes problematic:
- Using despite wanting to stop
- Neglecting responsibilities due to use
- Using in physically hazardous situations
- Continued use despite psychological or physical problems
- Needing more to achieve desired effects
Stimulant Use Disorder
Including cocaine, methamphetamine, or misuse of prescription stimulants like Adderall or Ritalin.
Red flags:
- Using stimulants not as prescribed
- Combining substances to counteract effects
- Significant mood swings related to use
- Sleep disruption and appetite changes
- Risky behaviors while using
Benzodiazepine Dependence
Physical dependence can develop even when taking these medications as prescribed, requiring careful medical management to discontinue safely.
The Connection Between Mental Health and Addiction
Research shows that approximately 50-60% of individuals with substance use disorders also have co-occurring mental health conditions. These conditions can both contribute to addiction and complicate recovery:
Common Co-Occurring Conditions:
Depression: Using substances to escape emotional pain or feel temporary relief
Anxiety Disorders: Self-medicating worry, panic, or social anxiety
ADHD: Self-medicating focus issues; impulsivity increases addiction risk
Bipolar Disorder: Substances trigger mood episodes; mania increases risky behavior
PTSD/Trauma: Using substances to numb traumatic memories or hypervigilence
OCD: Temporarily reducing intrusive thoughts through substance use
Why Integrated Treatment Matters: Treating only the addiction while ignoring underlying mental health conditions leads to high relapse rates. Our providers address both simultaneously, providing:
Appropriate psychiatric medications for co-occurring conditions
- Understanding of how mental health symptoms drive substance use
- Strategies to manage triggers related to psychiatric symptoms
- Stabilization of mood, attention, and anxiety alongside addiction treatment
Dual Diagnosis: Treating Co-Occurring Disorders
Most individuals with substance use disorders have at least one co-occurring mental health condition. We specialize in dual diagnosis treatment:
|
Mental Health Condition |
How It Relates to Substance Use |
Integrated Treatment |
| Depression | Self-medicating emotional pain; substances worsen depression | Antidepressants + therapy + sobriety support |
| Anxiety Disorders | Using substances to calm worry; rebound anxiety | Anti-anxiety medication + coping skills + exposure therapy |
| ADHD | Self-medicating focus issues; impulsivity increases risk | Stimulant or non-stimulant ADHD meds in stable recovery |
| Bipolar Disorder | Substances trigger mood episodes; mania increases risk-taking | Mood stabilizers + routine building + monitoring |
| PTSD/Trauma | Using substances to numb trauma symptoms | Trauma therapy + medication + safety planning |
| OCD | Substances temporarily reduce intrusive thoughts | OCD medication + ERP therapy + relapse prevention |
Treatment Approaches at Kolli Psychiatry
Initial Assessment
- Comprehensive psychiatric evaluation
- Substance use history and patterns
- Co-occurring mental health screening
- Medical history and current medications review
- Safety planning and withdrawal risk assessment
- Family and social support evaluation
Medication Management
Medication-Assisted Treatment (MAT):
- Buprenorphine (Suboxone) for opioid use disorder
- Naltrexone (Vivitrol) for alcohol or opioid use disorder
- Acamprosate for alcohol use disorder
- Disulfiram for alcohol use disorder when appropriate
Treatment of Co-Occurring Conditions:
- Antidepressants for depression and anxiety
- ADHD medications when appropriate in stable recovery
- Mood stabilizers for bipolar disorder
- Sleep medications for insomnia
- Anti-anxiety medications (non-addictive options prioritized)
Collaborative Care Approach
Our providers work closely with:
- Individual therapists for counseling and behavioral interventions
- Support groups (AA, NA, SMART Recovery)
- Intensive outpatient programs when needed
- Primary care physicians for overall health
- Family members (with your permission) for comprehensive support
Ongoing Support
- Regular medication management appointments
- Monitoring for side effects and treatment effectiveness
- Adjustment of medications as recovery progresses
- Crisis planning and intervention
- Long-term relapse prevention strategies
Other Conditions We Treat
Our experienced New Jersey psychiatrists specialize in treating a wide range of mental health issues, from simple to complex concerns, including but not limited to depression, anxiety OCD, ADHD, corporate work stress, and personality disorders.
Self-Assessment: Do I Have a Substance Use Problem?
Answer honestly:
- Have you tried to cut down or stop but couldn’t?
- Do you spend a lot of time obtaining, using, or recovering from substances?
- Do you have strong cravings or urges to use?
- Has substance use interfered with work, school, or family responsibilities?
- Do you continue using despite relationship problems it causes?
- Have you given up activities you used to enjoy?
- Have you used substances in dangerous situations (driving, operating machinery)?
- Do you continue using despite physical or psychological problems?
- Do you need more of the substance to get the same effect?
Do you experience withdrawal symptoms when you stop?
If you checked 2-3 boxes: Mild substance use disorder – early intervention can prevent progression
If you checked 4-5 boxes: Moderate substance use disorder – professional treatment recommended
If you checked 6+ boxes: Severe substance use disorder – comprehensive treatment needed
This is not a diagnostic tool. Only a qualified healthcare provider can make a formal diagnosis.
What Recovery Looks Like
Recovery isn’t just stopping substance use—it’s building a life where substances no longer serve a purpose. For our clients in Monmouth County communities, this means:
Early Recovery (First 3-6 months):
- Stabilizing physically and mentally
- Developing new routines and coping strategies
- Building a support network
- Addressing underlying mental health conditions
- Beginning therapy and support group participation
Ongoing Recovery (6 months+):
- Maintaining sobriety while rebuilding life
- Deepening relationships
- Pursuing goals and interests
- Managing triggers and high-risk situations
- Continuing mental health treatment
Long-Term Recovery:
- Living a values-driven life
- Helping others in recovery when appropriate
- Sustained mental health and functioning
- Meaningful connections and purpose
- Resilience in face of challenges
Why People in Monmouth County Choose Kolli Psychiatry
Expert Dual Diagnosis Treatment
Our providers recognize that addiction rarely stands alone. Whether you’re managing ADHD, depression, anxiety, trauma, or other mental health conditions, we treat the whole picture—not just the substance use.
Medication-Assisted Treatment Expertise
Evidence-based MAT significantly improves recovery outcomes. Our team has extensive experience prescribing buprenorphine, naltrexone, and other medications that reduce cravings and support long-term sobriety.
Personalized, Comprehensive Care
Your treatment plan is tailored to your specific substances, mental health needs, life circumstances, and recovery goals. There’s no one-size-fits-all approach to addiction treatment.
Convenient Location in New Jersey
Our Red Bank office serves clients throughout Monmouth County, including Rumson, Fair Haven, Little Silver, Shrewsbury, Holmdel, Middletown, Hazlet, Keyport, Atlantic Highlands, Highlands, and surrounding communities.
Compassionate, Non-Judgmental Care
Addiction carries enough shame already. Our providers offer evidence-based care in an environment of respect, understanding, and genuine support for your recovery journey.
Getting Started with your Treatment in New Jersey
Taking the first step toward recovery is courageous. Here’s what to expect:
- Contact our office at 732-655-4568 or book through our website
- Schedule an initial evaluation with one of our providers
- Complete intake paperwork about your history and current concerns
- Attend your first appointment for comprehensive assessment
- Begin treatment with a personalized plan combining psychiatric care and coordination with other services
Frequently Asked Questions about Addiction Treatment Near Me
What types of addiction do you treat?
We treat a range of substance and behavioral addictions, including alcohol, cannabis/weed, stimulants, and compulsive behaviors like gaming, phone use, and social media use. Treatment plans are individualized based on severity, safety, and what supports real-life functioning.
What is the difference between addiction, misuse, and dependence?
“Misuse” is using a substance in a way that increases risk (higher doses, mixing substances, using someone else’s prescription). “Dependence” can mean your body has adapted (tolerance/withdrawal). “Addiction” typically involves loss of control, cravings, continued use despite consequences, and impaired functioning.
Do you offer outpatient addiction treatment?
Yes. outpatient addiction treatment can be a good fit when symptoms are moderate, the person is medically stable, and they can stay safe between sessions. We can also help you determine when a higher level of care (IOP, PHP, or residential) is more appropriate.
What does cocaine addiction treatment usually involve?
Cocaine addiction treatment often includes a comprehensive psychiatric evaluation, treatment for co-occurring anxiety/depression/ADHD when present, evidence-based therapy referrals, and close follow-up focused on cravings, triggers, relapse prevention, and recovery supports.
Do you provide weed addiction treatment?
Yes—weed addiction treatment can address cravings, withdrawal symptoms (irritability, insomnia, low appetite), motivation, anxiety, and patterns of avoidance. We also help patients build coping strategies and routines that support sustained change.
Do you offer teen or adolescent services?
Yes. adolescent addiction treatment focuses on developmentally appropriate care, family involvement when indicated, school functioning, co-occurring mental health concerns, and practical strategies for harm reduction and recovery.
Is teen marijuana addiction treatment different from adult treatment?
Often, yes. teen marijuana addiction treatment typically includes more family-based support, attention to school/peer dynamics, and monitoring for mood, anxiety, motivation, and attention concerns that can be worsened by cannabis use.
Can you help if my child is experimenting but not “addicted”?
Absolutely. Early intervention can prevent escalation. We can assess risk factors, identify patterns, and support healthier coping skills—without jumping to labels.
Do you treat behavioral addictions like phones, social media, or gaming?
Yes. We can help evaluate whether the behavior is compulsive, interfering with sleep/school/work/relationships, and tied to anxiety, depression, ADHD, or loneliness. Treatment may include skills-based approaches, boundaries, and addressing underlying drivers.
What is phone addiction treatment?
Phone addiction treatment focuses on reducing compulsive checking and scrolling, improving impulse control, rebuilding attention, and replacing the habit loop with healthier routines—often alongside treatment of anxiety, depression, or ADHD if present.
What is social media addiction treatment?
Social media addiction treatment targets compulsive use, comparison-driven mood problems, sleep disruption, and attention fragmentation. It often includes digital boundaries, coping strategies for urges, and work on self-esteem and emotion regulation.
Do you provide video game addiction treatment near me?
If you’re searching video game addiction treatment near me, we offer evaluations and treatment planning, including telehealth options depending on your location. We can also coordinate therapy supports and help determine the right level of care.
Do you offer virtual addiction treatment?
Yes—virtual addiction treatment can work well for many patients, especially for follow-ups, coaching, and coordinating care. We’ll also discuss when in-person care or a higher level of support is safer or more effective.
Can you treat addiction if there’s also anxiety, depression, ADHD, or trauma?
Yes. Co-occurring conditions are common and treating them often improves substance outcomes. We take an integrated approach so you’re not trying to manage everything in silos.
How do you decide what level of care someone needs?
We look at safety risks, withdrawal concerns, daily functioning, prior treatment history, medical/psychiatric complexity, home supports, and relapse risk. Based on that, we recommend outpatient, IOP/PHP, or residential options.
What should I do if someone is at immediate risk (overdose, severe withdrawal, suicidal thoughts)?
If there is immediate danger, call emergency services or go to the nearest emergency department. Urgent medical care is the priority, and we can help coordinate next steps once the person is safe.
Kolli Psychiatry | Red Bank, NJ | www.kollipsych.com
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Please consult with a qualified healthcare provider for proper evaluation and treatment.






