IKANN WELLNESS

Prescription Drug Addiction Treatment for Women in Fort Lauderdale

When the Medicine Becomes the Problem — There Is a Path Forward

Prescription drug addiction is one of the most misunderstood and stigmatized forms of dependency — particularly for women. It can begin with a legitimate prescription from a trusted doctor: medication for anxiety, pain, sleep, or focus. Over time, what was intended to help can quietly become something you cannot function without. And because the pills came from a prescription, many women spend years dismissing the severity of what is happening, telling themselves that "it's not really addiction" because a doctor prescribed it.

At IKANN Wellness, we understand the complex reality of prescription drug dependency in women. We provide compassionate, medically-informed treatment that addresses the full picture — the physiological dependence, the underlying conditions the medication was originally treating, the emotional and psychological factors that have sustained use, and the path forward to a life that is genuinely free. You deserve care that sees the complexity of your situation without judgment.

What Is Prescription Drug Addiction?

Compassionate prescription drug addiction therapy at IKANN Wellness

Prescription drug addiction — clinically termed a prescription drug use disorder — develops when a person uses prescription medications in ways that differ from how they were prescribed (larger doses, more frequently, or for longer than intended), develops physical dependence and tolerance, and experiences significant distress or life impairment as a result. Prescription drug dependence can develop even when medications are taken exactly as prescribed — particularly with benzodiazepines and opioids, which produce physiological dependence in most people who use them regularly for more than a few weeks.

Women are prescribed prescription medications at significantly higher rates than men — including benzodiazepines like Xanax and Klonopin for anxiety, opioids for pain management, stimulants like Adderall for ADHD, and sedative-hypnotics like Ambien or Lunesta for sleep disorders. Women also metabolize many medications differently than men, meaning they may experience stronger effects from the same dose, develop dependence faster, and face different patterns of side effects and withdrawal. These biological realities have been systematically understudied, leaving many women without the gender-informed care they need.

The most commonly misused prescription drug categories in women include benzodiazepines and other anti-anxiety medications, opioid pain medications, prescription stimulants, and sedative-hypnotics. Each of these medication classes has its own distinct pharmacology, withdrawal profile, and treatment requirements — which is why individualized, medically-informed assessment is essential before beginning treatment. Generic "one-size" approaches are particularly problematic for prescription drug dependency, where the withdrawal from some medications (particularly benzodiazepines) can be medically serious and must be managed carefully.

Prescription drug addiction in women is almost always embedded in a larger clinical picture. The anxiety, depression, pain, or sleep disturbance the medication was originally treating may have been undertreated or misdiagnosed, and the medication became a way to manage what therapy and lifestyle changes alone had not resolved. For women with trauma histories, prescription medications often serve a self-regulatory function — quieting hypervigilance, numbing emotional pain, or providing the sedation needed to sleep when PTSD symptoms would otherwise not allow it. Our treatment addresses these underlying needs directly, so that recovery from prescription dependence includes developing the skills and supports to manage the original conditions without medication that has become harmful.

🧑‍⚕️ Free Confidential Consultation — Take the first step today. Call (786) 504-7626 to speak with a compassionate member of our team — no obligation, no judgment.

Signs and Symptoms of Prescription Drug Addiction in Women

Taking more medication than prescribed — increasing doses beyond what was directed because the prescribed amount no longer produces the desired effect
Refilling prescriptions early, "doctor shopping" to obtain multiple prescriptions from different providers, or purchasing prescription medications outside of medical channels
Using prescription medications to manage emotions rather than physical symptoms — taking anxiety medication whenever stressed rather than for clinical anxiety, or using sedatives to cope with distress rather than a diagnosed sleep disorder
Physical tolerance: needing progressively higher doses to achieve the same relief, with markedly diminished effects at the originally prescribed dose
Withdrawal symptoms when skipping doses or running out: for benzodiazepines — severe anxiety, panic, insomnia, sweating, tremors, and potentially dangerous seizures; for opioids — flu-like symptoms, muscle pain, nausea, and intense cravings; for stimulants — profound fatigue, depression, and cognitive slowing
Inability to function without the medication: feeling unable to manage anxiety, sleep, or daily tasks without taking the medication, regardless of the original clinical need
Concealing use from healthcare providers or loved ones; feeling shame, defensiveness, or secrecy around medication use
Continuing to use despite recognized harms: persistent use despite awareness that the medication is worsening depression, affecting memory, harming relationships, or creating other significant problems
Combining prescription medications with alcohol or other substances to enhance effects — a combination that significantly increases risks of respiratory depression, overdose, and dependence acceleration

Our Approach to Prescription Drug Addiction Treatment

Prescription drug addiction treatment at IKANN Wellness begins with a thorough, individualized assessment by our clinical and psychiatric team. Before any treatment plan is developed, we need to understand exactly what medications are involved, how long and how heavily they have been used, what conditions they were originally prescribed to treat, and what co-occurring mental health and medical conditions are present. This information shapes a treatment plan that is both medically safe and clinically sophisticated as part of our comprehensive addiction treatment program.

Mindfulness-based prescription drug recovery for women at IKANN Wellness

Medically-Informed Withdrawal and Stabilization

Not all prescription drug withdrawal is equal. Benzodiazepine withdrawal can be genuinely life-threatening if managed abruptly and requires a carefully supervised tapering schedule. Opioid withdrawal, while intensely uncomfortable, is generally not medically dangerous — but managing it effectively improves treatment retention and outcomes. Stimulant discontinuation produces a psychological crash of depression and fatigue. Our psychiatric team works with you and your prescribing physician to develop a medically appropriate tapering or discontinuation plan before structured treatment programming begins. We will never recommend abrupt discontinuation of medications that require medical supervision — your physical safety is always the first clinical priority.

Treating the Underlying Conditions

Every prescription drug dependency we treat has a "before" — the anxiety, pain, trauma, depression, ADHD, or sleep disorder that the medication was originally addressing. Recovery cannot be sustainable if those underlying conditions are not treated effectively. Our integrated dual diagnosis treatment model simultaneously addresses prescription drug dependence and the underlying conditions that drove use, using evidence-based non-pharmacological approaches — CBT, DBT, EMDR, mindfulness — that provide genuine, sustainable relief without creating new dependencies. For some women, appropriate psychiatric medication is part of the treatment plan — but always approached thoughtfully, with careful attention to dependency risks.

Rebuilding Trust and Self-Knowledge

Many women in prescription drug recovery struggle with a profound loss of trust in their own judgment — "How did I let this happen with a doctor-prescribed medication?" "How do I know if I can ever take medication again?" "How do I manage my anxiety without it?" Our therapists work directly with the shame, self-doubt, and confusion that prescription drug dependency creates, helping women rebuild a confident, informed relationship with their own health and healthcare decisions.

Treatment Modalities for Prescription Drug Dependency

Psychiatric Evaluation & Medically-Supervised Tapering

Comprehensive assessment of medication history, current use, and co-occurring conditions, with medically appropriate tapering protocols for benzodiazepines and coordination with prescribing physicians.

Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT)

Addresses the thoughts, beliefs, and patterns that sustain prescription medication misuse, including cognitive distortions about the medication's necessity and developing alternative coping strategies for managing anxiety, pain, and stress.

EMDR Therapy

Processes traumatic experiences that have been managed through prescription medication self-regulation, allowing women to develop genuine emotional processing capacity rather than pharmacological numbing.

Dialectical Behavior Therapy (DBT)

Builds the distress tolerance and emotional regulation skills that allow women to manage anxiety, emotional dysregulation, and pain without relying on prescription medication as a primary coping tool.

Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR)

Evidence-based mindfulness practices shown to be effective for managing anxiety, chronic pain, and sleep disturbance — the three most common conditions driving prescription drug misuse in women.

Group Therapy (Women-Only)

Therapeutic groups addressing the specific experiences of prescription drug dependency, including shame, the complexity of "it started with a prescription," and building mutual support in recovery.

Holistic Therapies

Yoga, breathwork, acupuncture coordination, and nutritional counseling to support physical restoration and develop non-pharmacological tools for managing the symptoms that originally prompted medication use.

Relapse Prevention & Medication Safety Planning

Developing individualized plans for safely managing legitimate medication needs in the future, including communication strategies with healthcare providers and recognition of escalating use patterns.

Levels of Care for Prescription Drug Treatment

Flexible

Intensive Outpatient Program (IOP)

3 hours per session, three to five days per week. IOP is appropriate for women who have completed medical stabilization or tapering, those with mild to moderate prescription drug dependence without significant medical complexity, and women transitioning from PHP. Evening scheduling makes IOP accessible for women managing work, parenting, and caregiving alongside treatment.

Co-Occurring Conditions

Prescription drug dependency in women is almost universally accompanied by one or more co-occurring conditions, all addressed in our integrated dual diagnosis model:

Generalized anxiety disorder
Panic disorder
PTSD and complex trauma
Major depressive disorder
Chronic pain conditions
Insomnia and sleep disorders
ADHD
Eating disorders
Opioid use disorder
Alcohol use disorder

Insurance & Getting Started

We accept most major insurance plans for prescription drug addiction treatment. Call (786) 504-7626 or email office@ikannwellness.com to begin your confidential assessment. Visit our insurance verification page for more details.

Start Your Journey to Healing Today

The prescription that was supposed to help has become a weight you carry alone. You don't have to carry it anymore. We are here — without judgment, with expertise, and with genuine care for your recovery.

Frequently Asked Questions — Prescription Drug Treatment

Is it really addiction if a doctor prescribed the medication?
Yes. Prescription drug addiction is a real, recognized medical condition regardless of how the medication was obtained. Many people who develop prescription drug dependency began with a legitimate prescription used exactly as directed. Certain medications — particularly benzodiazepines and opioids — produce physical dependence in virtually everyone who uses them regularly for more than a few weeks, making dependence a predictable physiological outcome rather than a sign of addictive behavior. Your situation is both legitimate and treatable.
Can I stop taking my benzodiazepine on my own?
No. Stopping benzodiazepines abruptly — particularly after prolonged or high-dose use — can cause dangerous and potentially life-threatening withdrawal symptoms including severe anxiety, panic attacks, tremors, seizures, and in rare cases, psychosis. Benzodiazepine discontinuation must be managed under medical supervision with a carefully planned tapering schedule. Please do not attempt to stop benzodiazepines without medical guidance. Contact us and we will ensure you have the appropriate medical support for safe discontinuation.
How will you treat my anxiety if I stop taking my anxiety medication?
This is one of the most important questions women in prescription drug recovery ask — and it deserves a thorough answer. Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, particularly CBT for anxiety disorders, has a very strong evidence base and produces lasting improvements in anxiety that medication alone does not. DBT skills, mindfulness-based stress reduction, EMDR for trauma-driven anxiety, and appropriate lifestyle interventions all provide genuine, sustainable anxiety relief. For some women, carefully chosen non-habit-forming psychiatric medication remains part of the treatment plan. We will work with you to develop a comprehensive anxiety management approach before, during, and after benzodiazepine tapering.
My doctor doesn't know how much I'm really taking. Do I need to tell them?
Honest communication with your prescribing physician is important for your medical safety — particularly if you are planning to discontinue or taper. Our clinical team can help you prepare for this conversation and, with your permission, coordinate directly with your physician as part of your treatment plan. You may be concerned about your doctor's reaction — but healthcare providers are bound by confidentiality and are there to support your health, not to judge your choices. Many women find that addressing this directly with their physician is one of the most relieving steps of early recovery.
Will I ever be able to take medication again after prescription drug treatment?
Yes — many women in recovery from prescription drug dependency continue to take appropriate medications prescribed by informed physicians for legitimate conditions. Recovery does not mean never taking medication again; it means developing a healthy, honest, and safe relationship with medication use — including clear communication with your prescribing doctor, appropriate safeguards for high-risk medications, and reliable non-pharmacological coping strategies so that medication remains a tool rather than a necessity.

Start Your Journey to Healing Today

The prescription that was supposed to help has become a weight you carry alone. You don't have to carry it anymore. We are here — without judgment, with expertise, and with genuine care for your recovery.

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(786) 504,7626 office@ikannwellness.com