
Resort-Style Pool
Spa, Sauna & Wellness Suite
Chef-Prepared Meals DailyStandard residential cocaine rehab runs 30, 60, or 90 days. Most cocaine clients benefit from 60 days or more — the dopamine system rebuild is slow, and the first 90 days post-detox carry the highest relapse-risk window. Residential gives the client structured time inside that window, not after it. Outpatient cocaine rehab can be appropriate when the case is less severe and the client has strong sober support at home, predictable housing, and no cardiac concerns. We screen at intake and tell you which fits.
Cocaine detox is the 5 to 7 day medical clearance — sleep restoration, cardiac monitoring, anhedonia baseline, no withdrawal medication required because the syndrome is psychiatric rather than autonomic. Cocaine rehab is the 30 to 90 day residential program that follows. Both arcs matter for one reason — detox without cocaine rehab has high relapse rates, and cocaine rehab without prior medical clearance is unsafe for anyone with cardiac history. GEVS runs both arcs on one campus, with the same medical team carrying through.
Often, yes — that is what executive cocaine rehab is built for. Confidentiality is clinical default rather than premium upgrade. HIPAA plus 42 CFR Part 2 protections cover the record. FMLA covers up to 12 weeks of medical leave for most employees, and we coordinate the paperwork from our end. Scheduling flexibility for legal counsel, board calls, and family is built into the day. Return-to-work transition planning starts in week three or four, not at discharge.
Most major insurers cover residential cocaine rehab under SUD parity rules — Anthem Blue Cross, Aetna, Cigna, Carelon Behavioral Health, UnitedHealthcare, Empire Plan / NYSHIP plans we work with regularly. Coverage typically applies to medically necessary residential care, with length-of-stay reviewed at intervals. We do same-day verification before you commit, so the cost picture is clear before admission.