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Amphetamine Addiction Treatment in Ontario

Get a deeper understanding of amphetamine addiction and abuse symptoms and learn all you need to know, from what to expect to the different types of treatments.

Amphetamine Addiction Treatment in Ontario

Amphetamines are a class of synthetic stimulant drugs (also known as “uppers”) that speed up the central nervous system.

They allow messages to move faster between the body and brain, making users feel more alert and energized. Prescription amphetamine is used to treat narcolepsy, attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), obesity, and depression. However, amphetamine also causes euphoric feelings and a sense of power, often leading to its misuse. Illegally obtained amphetamine is typically used to improve cognitive ability, enhance sociability, and boost libido. Using amphetamine without a prescription carries a high risk of abuse and addiction.

It’s vital to seek help immediately if you or a loved one is struggling with the effects of amphetamine abuse and addiction. The Canadian Centre for Addictions offers amphetamine addiction treatment programs at our rehab in Ontario.

Advantages of Our Rehab

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    Accreditation Canada

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    National Association of Addiction Treatment Providers

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Our Addiction Treatment Programs

Factors That Affect Amphetamine Addiction

Stimulants affect people differently. A problem of amphetamine addiction builds through a mix of biology, mental health, environment, and access. While no single cause explains every case, the factors below commonly shape how use begins, escalates, and becomes hard to quit. When the pattern tips into amphetamine abuse, several of these influences are usually in play.

Factors That Affect Amphetamine Addiction

Neurodevelopmental and mental health
People living with ADHD or narcolepsy may use prescribed stimulants for years. Tolerance can creep up, dosing may drift beyond directions, and dependence can develop—especially alongside anxiety, depression, or sleep issues.
Environment and social availability
Easy access, peer norms, party scenes, and productivity-focused workplaces can normalize misuse. When pills circulate through friends or are traded online, casual “borrowing” can slide into regular, risky use.
Stress, sleep debt, and burnout
Chronic stress, shift work, exams, caregiving, or long commutes raise the appeal of staying “on.” Short-term boosts are reinforcing, but rebound fatigue and low mood often drive another dose.
Brain adaptations
With repeated exposure, reward and learning circuits recalibrate. Dopamine signalling, salience, and habit pathways shift, making cues and cravings more powerful while impulse control and decision-making weaken.
Genetics and family patterns
Heredity influences sensitivity to stimulants, reward processing, and stress responses. A family history of substance problems signals elevated risk, though it never guarantees the same outcome.
Academic and performance pressure
Students, trainees, and professionals may reach for stimulants to extend study or work hours. Off-label use can start as occasional “help,” then escalates as deadlines loom and sleep erodes.
Co-occurring substances and medical conditions
Mixing with alcohol, cannabis, or sedatives complicates mood and sleep, heightens cardiovascular strain, and deepens withdrawal. Conditions like PTSD or bipolar disorder can intensify cycles of use.
Route of administration and dose pattern
Crushing, snorting, or injecting creates rapid spikes that strongly reinforce the behaviour. Binge-and-crash cycles raise harm, increase tolerance, and make stopping feel unmanageable.
Life stage and development
Adolescents and young adults—whose prefrontal cortex is still maturing—show greater impulsivity and risk-taking. Earlier initiation is linked with more persistent problems later on.
Trauma history and adverse experiences
Childhood adversity, violence, or recent traumatic events can drive self-medication for focus, numbness, or control. Without targeted support, that coping strategy can harden into compulsive use.

Luxury Facilities at the Canadian Centre for Addiction

If you’re going through a tough time with drug addiction, you don’t have to face it alone. Our Luxury Rehab Centres in Port Hope and Cobourg, Ontario, are quiet, comfortable places where you can take a real break and start fresh. Both locations support people seeking amphetamine rehab, with discreet intake, medical oversight, and a plan tailored to your goals.

In Port Hope, our private rehab centre feels more like a peaceful retreat. Every room has calming lake views, a fireplace, and multiple decks to relax on. It’s a space to breathe, slow down, and focus on getting better. Alongside fresh, 5-star meals prepared by our chef, you’ll have access to on-site clinicians who understand stimulant withdrawal—fatigue, low mood, sleep disruption—and how to manage it safely.

Over in Cobourg, the vibe is just as warm and welcoming. It’s a place where you’ll be supported by people who truly care. We’re here to listen, guide you, and help you feel more like yourself again. Your care may include cognitive behavioural therapy, motivational interviewing, and contingency management—approaches shown to help with amphetamine use.

Each rehab treatment program includes one-to-one therapy, small group work, family support when helpful, and a relapse-prevention plan you can actually use at home. We also coordinate gradual return-to-work strategies for people with amphetamine addiction, boundary setting, and healthy routines, so you leave with tools that last. And when you’re ready to step down, we help you transition to aftercare and community supports, ensuring the next part of your recovery is steady, informed, and supported.

Withdrawal Symptoms of Amphetamine Addiction

Amphetamine withdrawal symptoms appear when a dependent person cuts down or stops use. They’re shaped by how long and how often you used, the amount taken, any co-occurring health conditions, other substances in the mix, and individual factors like age and sex. After a period of amphetamine abuse, many people feel an acute “crash” in the first 24–48 hours, a sub-acute phase over the next one to two weeks, and lingering symptoms that can last for weeks to months.

Withdrawal Symptoms of Amphetamine Addiction

Common symptoms include:

  • Delayed reaction times and slowed movement
  • Fatigue and sleeping for unusually long periods (hypersomnia)
  • Vivid, often unpleasant dreams
  • Confused or disordered thinking; poor concentration
  • Uncontrolled body movements and twitches
  • Increased appetite and strong sugar cravings
  • Irritability, agitation, and anxiety
  • Depressive episodes and low motivation (anhedonia)
  • Emotional outbursts or mood swings
  • Headaches, body aches, and general lethargy
  • Intense cravings for the drug

Less common but important to note: short-lived paranoia, temperature dysregulation (feeling unusually hot or cold), and disrupted sleep-wake cycles even after initial oversleeping.

The Canadian Centre
for Addictions Success Rate

Did not show improvement after
The Canadian Centre for Addictions
Program

Presented in Normal ranges at start
of The Canadian Centre for Addictions
Program

Showed significant improvement after
The Canadian Centre for Addictions
Program

Frequently Asked Questions

What are common amphetamine withdrawal symptoms and how long do they last?

Fatigue, hypersomnia, low mood, irritability, anxiety, increased appetite, slowed thinking and movement, vivid dreams, and strong cravings are typical. Symptoms often begin within 24–48 hours and can linger for weeks; mood changes may persist longer. Seek support if depression worsens or suicidal thoughts appear.

How is amphetamine addiction treated at our rehab centres in Ontario?

Evidence-based care centres on psychosocial therapies—especially contingency management—along with CBT and motivational approaches. Care may be delivered through outpatient services (e.g., RAAM clinics) or residential rehab treatment with structured therapy and aftercare.

Are there medications that help with amphetamine addiction?

There’s no widely approved “cure” medication yet. Some off-label options show promise (e.g., extended-release naltrexone plus bupropion), and Canadian trials are evaluating lisdexamfetamine combined with contingency management. Medication decisions should be made with a clinician familiar with stimulants.

Do I need a doctor’s referral to start getting help in Ontario?

No referral is required to begin care at the Canadian Centre for Addictions. You (or a family member/employer) can self-refer for a confidential assessment, and—if appropriate—admission to our Port Hope or Cobourg residential programs for rehab treatment focused on amphetamine addiction. With your consent, we coordinate with your family doctor or psychiatrist, but it isn’t a prerequisite. Prefer public options? Ontario’s RAAM clinics also accept walk-ins; our team can advise on the best fit and help you transition into the level of care you need.

What support is available after I leave Ontario (and beyond)?

Before discharge, you’ll have a relapse-prevention plan and follow-up options. We provide ongoing aftercare groups and help you connect with community resources in Ontario to stay on track after amphetamine abuse treatment.

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